The noun that is an irregular plural is geese.
A regular plural noun is a noun that adds an "s" or an "es" to the end of the word to form its plural.
An irregular plural noun is a noun that forms its plural in some other way; fore example the singular noun is "goose" the plural noun is "geese". The letters in the middle are changed.
An irregular noun is a noun (object, thing) which isn't pluralised simply by adding an s (or -es which is also common) For instance, regular nouns are house/houses, table/tables, dish/dishes. Irregular nouns are sheep/sheep, child/children, foot/feet, formula/formulae.
The plural form of "dog house" is "dog houses". In this case "dog" is an adjective describing the type of house and can not be plural. We are referring to several houses and not several dogs. Of course if the dog owned several houses then we could refer to the "dog's houses"
Yes. A regular plural is a word where you add an -s or -es ending Example: Cat becomes cats Dog become dogs House becomes houses Floor become floors Any word that does not follow that rule is considered irregular, such as Ox becoming Oxen Or goose becoming geese tooth --> teeth
The plural of house is houses. As in "the houses are ready to sell".
There is no standard collective noun for the noun 'shop houses'. However, a collective noun is an informal part of language. Any noun that suits the situation can function as a collective noun; for example, a row of shop houses, a block of shop houses, a street of shop houses, etc.
Land pollution is created by humans, animals, plants, factories, automobiles, and houses, for the most part.
no
they hid the animals in their houses
Animals live under water, forests, jungles and in houses as pets.
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poor hygiene sharing houses with animals
hides of animals
to make houses and cake (:
CN tower animals vegetation houses roads andhow about you get off the computer and do your homework on your own!
lots of animals can be found in houses, like peoples pets. but there could be stuff like rats or mice under your house/ floor boards.
medicines, habit for animals, animals, air, wood for houses and paper. AND MONEY
An irregular noun is a noun (object, thing) which isn't pluralised simply by adding an s (or -es which is also common) For instance, regular nouns are house/houses, table/tables, dish/dishes. Irregular nouns are sheep/sheep, child/children, foot/feet, formula/formulae.