Brushes.
The plural of the word brush is brushes. As in "she brushes her hair".
The plural noun of "brush" is "brushes."
The plural form of "brush" is "brushes."
The plural form of the noun 'brush' is brushes.
Brushes is the plural form, the singular form is brush.
The plural of the word brush is brushes. As in "she brushes her hair".
The singular noun form is brush; the plural noun form is brushes.The word brush is also a verb: brush, brushes, brushing, brushed.
It depends on which type of brush you mean. If you men a brush as in a shrubbery, then the word brush is plural and singular. To be lost in the brush implies that you are in an area that is full of bushes or shrubberies. If you mean a brush that you use in your hair, then the plural is brushes.
The plural form of "brush" is "brushes."
The plural noun of "brush" is "brushes."
The plural form of the noun 'brush' is brushes.
Clothes brushes is the plural of clothes brush
Brushes is the plural form, the singular form is brush.
"The painter's brush dropped to the floor." (The painter is singular, the brush is singular.)"The painters' brush dropped to the floor." (The painters is plural, the brush is still singular.)"The painters' brushes dropped to the floor." (The painters is plural, the brushes is plural.)
brush
Yes, the word 'brushes' is a common noun, the plural form of the noun 'brush', a general word for an instrument with bristles or wire used to smooth hair, fur, or fibers; or to clean surfaces.The word 'brushes' is also the third person, singular, present of the verb to brush.
Yes, the word 'brushes' is a common noun, the plural form of the noun 'brush', a general word for an instrument with bristles or wire used to smooth hair, fur, or fibers; or to clean surfaces.The word 'brushes' is also the third person, singular, present of the verb to brush.