The noun form of the adjective 'dirty' is dirtiness.
The word 'dirty' is the adjective form of the noun dirt.
Messes is the plural of mess. Meaning, to have multiple untidy, or dirty things.
I'll be your dirty dirty. Will you be my dirty dirty dirty?
The plural of "she" is "they", so the plural of "she had" is "they had".
The plural of rose is roses. The plural possessive is roses'.
The plural of 'bunch' is bunches.The plural of 'ant' is ants.The plural of 'batch' is batches.The plural of 'day' is days.The plural of 'chimney' is chimneys.The plural of 'tomato' is tomatoes.The plural of 'umbrella' is umbrellas.The plural of 'donkey' is donkeys.The plural of 'sky' is skies.The plural of 'foot' is feet.The plural of 'show' is shows.
The plural is monkeys. The monkeys were kept in cages. The plural possessive is monkeys'. The monkeys' cages were dirty.
lady is a singular noun -- The lady is late. ladies is a plural noun -- The ladies are late lady's is a singular possessive noun -- The lady's dress is dirty ladies' is a plural possessive noun -- The ladies' dresses are dirty.
Messes is the plural of mess. Meaning, to have multiple untidy, or dirty things.
Have can be both singular and plural, but has can only be singular. So you are partly right.Have is used with the first and second persons singular and with all persons plural and plural noun subjects:I/You/We/They have a large fat dog. The boys have a large fat dog.Has is used only with the third person singular and singular noun subjects:He/She has a small dirty dog. The doctorhas a small dirty dog
plural = oxen plural possessive = oxen's The oxen's tails were dirty.
The possessive form for "nurse" is "nurse's." So if you're talking about the stethoscope belonging to a nurse, you'd say "the nurse's stethoscope." Easy peasy lemon squeezy.
I'll be your dirty dirty. Will you be my dirty dirty dirty?
The possessive form for the noun project is project's.Example: We were sweaty and dirty as we cheered the project's end.
The singular sporca and the plural sporche and the singular sporco and the plural sporchi are Italian equivalents of the English word "dirty." Context makes clear whether feminine (cases 1, 2) or masculine (examples 3, 4) genders suit. The respective pronunciations will be "SPOR-ka" or "SPOR-key" in the feminine and "SPOR-ko" or "SPOR-kee" in the masculine in Pisan Italian.
dirty rotten scoundrels dirty work dirty pretty things dirty harry dirty dancing
Dirty DancingDirty HarryThe Dirty DozenDirty Mary and Crazy Larry
Present perfect is formed with - have/has +past participle.Dirty is a regular verb so the past participle is dirtied.He has dirtied the carpet. The dog has dirtied the carpet. - singular subjectsThey have dirtied the carpet. The cats have dirtied the carpet. - plural subjects