The plural of fire is fires.
The plural of fire drill is fire drills. As in "fire drills are a good practice".
No, "fires" does not have an apostrophe when used in its plural form. An apostrophe is used to indicate possession or contractions, but "fires" simply refers to multiple instances of fire. If you want to indicate possession, you would use "fire's" for singular possession or "fires'" for plural possession.
Ash can come directly from the English word, denoting an Ash tree or the residue of fire. It is also a nickname for Ashley, from an English surname meaning "ash tree clearing."
Possess is a verb. Its plural form (the one used with plural subjects) is possess, while the form used with singular subjects is possesses.Examples:We possess, they possess.He, she or it possesses.The noun form of possess is possession, plural possessions.
The plural of rose is roses. The plural possessive is roses'.
The plural of fire drill is fire drills. As in "fire drills are a good practice".
The plural of fire drill is fire drills. As in "fire drills are a good practice".
Fire-fighter's hoses is the plural of fire-fighter's hose
The plural form of fire station is fire stations,
The plural of zinc is zincs. As in "the zincs reacted violently to fire".
fires is a plural of fire fire...огън
Fire Fly-Fire Flies
Fires is a noun (plural form of fire) and a verb (third person singular conjugation of fire).
No, it is not. The word fires is a plural noun or a verb form meaning shoots or burns.
CHIEFS, example sentence: The city fire chiefs held a meeting regarding the newest regulations.
Fires is a noun (plural form of fire) and a verb (third person singular conjugation of fire).
No, "fires" does not have an apostrophe when used in its plural form. An apostrophe is used to indicate possession or contractions, but "fires" simply refers to multiple instances of fire. If you want to indicate possession, you would use "fire's" for singular possession or "fires'" for plural possession.