The plural of dessert is desserts.
Yes, the plural noun 'desserts' is an abstract noun as a word for 'that which one deserves'; a word for a concept.The plural noun 'desserts' is a concrete noun as a word for the last course of meals, usually something sweet.
The term for treats following a meal has two S's: dessert, plural desserts.E.g. Chocolate dessert recipes as opposed to the Sahara desert.
That is the correct spelling of the plural "lamingtons" meaning the Australian dessert sponge cakes.
"The boys want their dessert now."Yes, the possessive adjective 'their' agrees in number with the plural noun 'boys'.The pronoun 'their' is the plural form used to describe a noun belonging to a plural noun (or two or more nouns).
The sentence with the correct antecedent agreement is:B. "The boys want their dessert now."The plural possessive adjective "their" takes the place of the plural noun "boys".
I love dessert - J'aime dessert You love dessert - Vous aimez dessert They love dessert - Ils aiment dessert
Yes, the noun dessert is an abstract noun; a word for a concept. We think of the physical food eaten as dessert but it is a social construct that a peach or a pie is not just a food, it's a dessert.---If you are offered or are given a dessert, it is a concrete noun (food), regardless of what it is: you can see it, touch it, smell it, taste it. The only abstraction is the time of its consumption (at the end of a meal).The plural form is used abstractly in the metaphorical term "just desserts" - which means that a troublesome person has deservedly encountered trouble of his own.
Turron, flan, arroz con leche, and chocolate con churros are just a few Spanish desserts.
Pi with a capital P and small i is a mathematical term. Pie is a dessert, such as apple pie.
English --- dessert Swedish --- dessert
cannoli is the plural form of the singular word cannolo.
dessert its not dessert its desert -.- dessert it like another meal....