no
No, "oops" is not an interjection. It is an exclamation used to show that someone has made a mistake or done something unintentional.
The word interjection is a noun. The plural form is interjections.
The word "ow" is an interjection (exclamation) and has no formal plural. However, colloquially you could say you heard some "ows" from an injured skateboarder.
The word I is neither of these. It is the first person singular personal pronoun, nominative case, where the objective case is me. The corresponding plural pronouns are we and us.
There is no plural form for the pronoun 'there', a word that introduces a statement by taking the place of a noun for a specific place or circumstance (as used to introduce this sentence).The word 'there' has no plural form as an adverb: The bus stops there.The word 'there' has no plural form as an interjection: There! That didn't take long.
The word interjection is a noun. The plural form is interjections.
The word"why" has no plural. Why is not a noun nor pronoun. Why is an adverb or an interjection. question adverb: Why did you make so much chili? relative adverb: He didn't say why he had to go. interjection: Why, that's ridiculous!
The word 'hi' is an interjection, it has no plural form. The word 'hello' is also an interjection and it is a noun, the plural noun form is 'hellos'.
No, "oops" is not an interjection. It is an exclamation used to show that someone has made a mistake or done something unintentional.
The word interjection is a noun. The plural form is interjections.
year is a noun years is the plural form of year
The word "ow" is an interjection (exclamation) and has no formal plural. However, colloquially you could say you heard some "ows" from an injured skateboarder.
The slang term bollocks is a plural noun. The word can also be an interjection of annoyance or disbelief.
The word I is neither of these. It is the first person singular personal pronoun, nominative case, where the objective case is me. The corresponding plural pronouns are we and us.
No, it is a plural noun. It can also be a form of the colloquial verb "to rat" or an interjection ("Rats!") that suggests disappointment or discouragement.
There is no plural form for the pronoun 'there', a word that introduces a statement by taking the place of a noun for a specific place or circumstance (as used to introduce this sentence).The word 'there' has no plural form as an adverb: The bus stops there.The word 'there' has no plural form as an interjection: There! That didn't take long.
its an interjection