The plural of hospital is hospitals.
The plural form of el hospital is los hospitales.
The plural of casualty is casualties. As in "the casualties were rushed to hospital".
Just add -s hospitals
Rang is a verb it is the past tense of ring. Verbs don't usually have plural forms.Verbs do have a third person singular form which is verb + s.We ring the hospital everyday. Plural subject - no change to the verb.She rings the hospital everyday. Singular subject - verb +s.There are some verbs however that have singular and plural forms:singular / plural = am, is was / are, were, does / do, has / have
The plural of hospitality is hospitalities.
The plural possessive form is hospitals'.
Yes. Hospital is a noun, in the singular form. Hospitals is a noun, in the plural form.
'Ospedale' is an Italian equivalent of 'hospital'. It's a masculine noun whose plural form is 'ospedali' ['hospitals']. It's pronounced 'oh-speh-DAH-leh'.
A noun that ends in 's' is not necessarily plural. Nouns that end in 's' require the suffix 'es' to be added to pluralize them. For example:bus (singular) > buses (plural)glass (singular) > glasses (plural)kiss (singular) > kisses (plural)gas (singular) > gases (plural)
Patience is the characteristic of being able to wait for things without being stressed. Patients is the plural of a sick person in a hospital.
Recast the sentence, or risk losing clarity. Instead of "They took their power(s) of attorney(s) to the hospital," write "They each brought their power of attorney to the hospital" or "They took copies of their power of attorney to the hospital." Same problem arises with, for example, the title "Book of Mormon" and "Power of Love" You'd have to say "copies of the Book of Mormon" or "versions of Power of Love" to preserve your meaniing.
Yes, it can, but it might sound awkward. The sentence given as an example might sound better if worded as, "The doctors and the nurse went to the hospital." Better yet, try "The doctors, along with the nurse, went to the hospital." This would sound the best.