Virginia plan
More than one president
The president IS the executive brance. He is the primary componet of it and probably has as much power as he can get from it.
The Executive branch. Or, more specifically, the President of the United States.
He wrote Common Sense, a document to persuade more people to take the side of independance from Great Britan
Yes, the plural of the noun 'youth' is youths.The plural noun 'youths' is a word for two or more young people.The noun 'youth' as a word for a period in one's life is an uncountable noun.
Virginia plan
It depends on the legislation of the country. There is no single answer, what may require more than one executive in one country may not be true elsewhere.
More than one president
To denote that there is more than one executive.
By arguing that a singular executive was MORE likely to be energetic and to govern with efficiency and dispatch than a plural committee of executives.
"Document" can be both singular and plural. When referring to one piece of written or printed material, it is singular. When referring to more than one piece of written or printed material, it is plural.
The Virginia Plan, proposed by James Madison at the Constitutional Convention in 1787, called for a plural executive in the executive branch of government. This plan suggested that the executive be composed of multiple individuals rather than a single president, allowing for a more collective leadership approach. However, this idea was ultimately rejected in favor of a singular executive, leading to the establishment of the presidency as we know it today.
the plural of opposite is opposites.
The plural of the noun bias would be biases. (or more rarely biasses)
The English plural is carcinomas. The Greek/Latin plural would be carcinomata.
The plural noun 'families' is a word for two or more groups of related people.For example:My family has just one car. (singular)Most of the families in my neighborhood have two or more. (plural)
The word fungi is a plural noun.The singular noun is fungus.This is a Latin plural more commonly used than the English plural which would be funguses.