No
Had may be singular or plural. --- No! We use had if the noun is singular and we use have if the noun is plural! TY!ural.
The word sister's is a possessive, singular noun. It can also be a contraction of "sister is".The word sisters is a plural noun and sisters' is a possessive, plural noun.
No in is a preposition -- They walked in the park an adverb -- The doctor is not in today an adjective -- This is the in book at the moment a noun -- He's got an in with the senator.
"Lot" can be both singular and plural. When used to refer to a group or collection of items, it is plural (e.g., "There are a lot of books on the shelf."). When used to refer to a specific piece of land or a specific group of items, it is singular (e.g., "This lot is for sale.").
Verbs are not technically singular and plural, but rather are in "agreement" with the subject being used. "Plural verbs" are used with plural nouns, except where the noun is a "group" plural. Generally speaking, an S noun does not use an S verb. Other improper plurals (men, geese) likewise do not use the S verbs.Examples :The boy walks to the store. (The s verb goes with the singular noun.)The boys walk to the store. (The s noun does not use an s verb.)The team walks to the park. (group noun)The family visits the zoo often. (group noun)Pronouns only use the S verbs for third person singular.(I sit. We sit. You sit. They sit.) but (he, she, or it sits)
Had may be singular or plural. --- No! We use had if the noun is singular and we use have if the noun is plural! TY!ural.
The noun 'use' is singular noun. The plural form is uses.The word 'use' is also a verb: use, uses, using, used.
Phenomena is a plural noun. The singular form is phenomenon. There is some tendency to use phenomena as a singular noun, but it is not actually a legitimate form.
'Has' is used for singular nouns, while 'have' is used for plural nouns.E.g. The dog has a kennel. The dogs have kennels.
Use do/does in the Present simple tense.Positive Sentences:I/You/We/They/plural noun + doHe/She/It/singular noun + doesI do my homework in the evening.She does the dishes twice a day.Questions:do + I/you/we/they/plural noun + verbdoes + he/she/it/singular noun + verbDo you like tea?Yes, I do./ No, I don't.Does your father have a car?Yes, he does./ No, he doesn't.
The noun "public" is a collective noun, and may be singular or plural depending on its use.
The noun 'bait' is singular; the plural form is baits. Example sentence:We use several different types of baits and lures for bass fishing.
The word sister's is a possessive, singular noun. It can also be a contraction of "sister is".The word sisters is a plural noun and sisters' is a possessive, plural noun.
The noun public (the public, the citizenry) is a collective noun, and can use either the singular or plural form of a verb depending on its use.
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.
As a collective noun, it can take either a singular or plural noun. If, however, it follows the definite article the, you should use a singular verb, as in The number of students taking advanced math classes has fallen over the last ten years.
No in is a preposition -- They walked in the park an adverb -- The doctor is not in today an adjective -- This is the in book at the moment a noun -- He's got an in with the senator.