The noun form for the adjective empty is emptiness.
The noun form for the verb to empty is the gerund, emptying.
The word empty (empties) is a noun, a word for an empty container.
There are only plurals for nouns and empty is a adjective, so there is none.
The carpet needs cleaning - singular noun, verb has an -sThe carpets need cleaning - plural noun, verb has no-sShe does the cooking - singular subjectThey do the cooking - plural subject.The bin is empty - singular subject / singular be verbThe bins are empty - plural subject / plural be verbThe bin was empty - singular subject / singular past be verbThe bins were empty - plural subject / plural past be verb
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'.
applied is does not have a plural but is apply it does have a plural.
There are only plurals for nouns and empty is a adjective, so there is none.
The carpet needs cleaning - singular noun, verb has an -sThe carpets need cleaning - plural noun, verb has no-sShe does the cooking - singular subjectThey do the cooking - plural subject.The bin is empty - singular subject / singular be verbThe bins are empty - plural subject / plural be verbThe bin was empty - singular subject / singular past be verbThe bins were empty - plural subject / plural past be verb
The abstract noun for the adjective empty and the verb to empty is emptiness.The word empty and the plural empties are used informally as nouns for containers that no longer have contents, concrete nouns.
agreement is a matching relationship between subject and verb singular subjects go with singular verb phrases plural subjects go with plural verb phrases. verbs have singular and plural forms only in the present tense. This rose looks beautiful (singular), These roses look beautiful (plural) He likes rugby (singular) The men like rugby (plural) past: He liked rugby. The men liked rugby - same verb form But the be verb has singular and plural forms in both past and present tense. singular: The box is empty (present) The box was empty (past) plural: The boxes are empty (present) The boxes were empty (past)
The plural noun is seashells, a word for two or more empty mollusk coverings.
Is is used when you are talking about a singular object for example "the house is empty", while are is used when you are talking about more than one object for example "the houses are empty"
The singular vuota and the plural vuote in the feminine and the singular vuoto and the plural vuotiin the masculine are Italian equivalents of the English word "empty." Context makes clear which gender and which number suit. The respective pronunciations will be "VWO-ta" and "VWO-tey" in the feminine and "VWO-to" and "VWO-tee" in the masculine in Italian.
As a noun, plural of void, which is usually understood to mean an empty space. As a verb, present tense of "void", which means to make something invalid.
It depends. The plural form of dog is dogs but the possessive form of dog is dog's IE: Two dogs are sitting on the porch. The dog's food dish is empty.
An empty set is not a proper subset of an empty set.An empty set is not a proper subset of an empty set.An empty set is not a proper subset of an empty set.An empty set is not a proper subset of an empty set.
This is our land and we will fight for it.Our nephew is coming over later.Why did you empty our joint bank account?
Where is the bottle? There are droplets so it is not empty. An empty bottle is empty of liquid conent but it will have air in it.