The indefinite pronoun 'few' takes the place of an unknown or unnamed small number of people or things. The word 'few' is a plural form, taking a plural verb form. Example:
Many are called but few arechosen.
The word "princes" (and a few others where an -ess form is possible). Prince becomes plural when an S is added but becomes a singular noun (the female gender) by adding another S.
The noun year is the singular form.The plural form is years.example: This year has gone well, better than the last few years.
The noun 'go' is the singular form. Example:Singular: I've never tried Latin dance but I'll give it a go.Plural: You've had a few goes at that, let me give it a try.The word 'go' is also a verb: go, goes, going, gone.
Present tense verbs take different forms to agree in number with their subject. Most verbs conjugate for the third person singular (which has an -s ending) and third person plural. First and second person (singular and plural) usuallytake third person plural conjugation.I march (first person singular)We march (first person plural)You march (second person singular and plural)He/she marches (third person singular)They march (third person plural)The noun march is the singular form; the plural form is marches, for example:They were exhausted but motivated on the march back to camp.After a few days, the marches took their toll on the men.Our vacation is scheduled for the month of March.For the last three Marches we've had a late snowfall.
Impose is a verb. Except for a few very old core vocabulary words, verbs do not have singular or plural forms. imposes
The word "princes" (and a few others where an -ess form is possible). Prince becomes plural when an S is added but becomes a singular noun (the female gender) by adding another S.
The noun year is the singular form.The plural form is years.example: This year has gone well, better than the last few years.
There are several words that are both plural and singular. As an example: Jedi. Jedi is both singular: "I am a jedi" and plural: "Kill all the jedi!" A few other examples include fish, sperm, quail, and buffalo
The noun 'go' is the singular form. Example:Singular: I've never tried Latin dance but I'll give it a go.Plural: You've had a few goes at that, let me give it a try.The word 'go' is also a verb: go, goes, going, gone.
The plural form of "ox" is "oxen." "Oxen" is an example of an irregular plural noun. Irregular plurals do not follow the typical pattern of adding an "s" or "es" to form the plural form. Instead, they have unique forms that need to be memorized. Here are a few examples: Singular: ox, Plural: oxen Singular: child, Plural: children Singular: mouse, Plural: mice Singular: tooth, Plural: teeth Singular: man, Plural: men So, in summary, the plural form of "ox" is "oxen."
Not as a plural of a singular noun. Once it is plural, it is already a multiple.However, group nouns that can use a singular verb form can be made plural to indicate more than one group or instance, such as family-families and staff-staffs.ALSO, a few plural nouns have homonyms that are singular, and these can be made plural.One example is people, which is a plural noun, but also has a singular meaning as "a race of individuals" which can be pluralized as peoples.
Present tense verbs take different forms to agree in number with their subject. Most verbs conjugate for the third person singular (which has an -s ending) and third person plural. First and second person (singular and plural) usuallytake third person plural conjugation.I march (first person singular)We march (first person plural)You march (second person singular and plural)He/she marches (third person singular)They march (third person plural)The noun march is the singular form; the plural form is marches, for example:They were exhausted but motivated on the march back to camp.After a few days, the marches took their toll on the men.Our vacation is scheduled for the month of March.For the last three Marches we've had a late snowfall.
Impose is a verb. Except for a few very old core vocabulary words, verbs do not have singular or plural forms. imposes
Data, the media, statistics and politics for a few.
Some indefinite pronouns are singular only, some are plural only, and some function as both singular and plural. Examples: SINGULAR another anybody anyone anything each either enough everybody everyone everything less little much neither nobody no one nothing one other somebody someone something PLURAL both few fewer many others several they (as a word for people in general) SINGULAR or PLURAL all any more most none some such
The correct grammar for the sentence is "Here are a few more." In this case, "few" is being used as a plural noun, so the verb "are" should also be plural to agree with it. Using "is" would be incorrect because it is singular and does not match the plural noun "few."
"Garden" in not gender specific in Englisg; it does not have a masculine or feminine form. While romance languages such as Spanish, French and Latin have a great number of gender specific terms, English has very few, and even these are going by the wayside from disuse, such as "actor" and "actress".