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No, "quiet" is an uncountable noun and does not have a plural form. It is used to describe a lack of noise or sound, rather than something that can be counted in multiples.
Yes, "shenanigans" is a plural noun, so you should use a plural verb with it. For example, you would say "The shenanigans were troublesome" rather than "The shenanigans was troublesome."
The cuneiform script used in ancient Mesopotamia consisted of around 600 to 700 signs, rather than a traditional alphabet with distinct letters. These signs did not represent individual sounds like letters in modern alphabets, but rather logograms or phonetic components.
The plural indefinite pronouns are:bothfewfewermanyothersseveralthey (as a word for people in general)The pronouns that can be singular or plural are:allanymoremostnonesomesuch
There is two ways to find out if a Spanish verb is plural or singular. You can either look it up or you can see if there is in S on the end.
'Sit' is a verb, so it does not have a plural form. The word 'sits' is not a plural, but rather, it is the present tense of the word 'sit'.
Being a preposition, beside has no plural form. The word besides, meaning "also," is not a plural form, but rather an adverbial genitive.
it's just man made but you use "are" rather than "is" before it for plural.
Chinese, unlike Western languages like English, French, and German, does not have an alphabet and letters. Instead, it has something known as a "character system" that is composed of thousands of different symbols (known as characters) that each have a different pronunciation. So, rather than spelling with letters, Chinese write characters.
The plural of hiss is hisses, but it a word generally used as a verb rather than a noun.
No, but compound is rather chemical combination of two more element
Glasses are a plural form for glass (a drinking glass, or a lens). To indicate the plural of glasses (eyewear, a pair of eyeglasses), you would have to use the description "pairs of glasses."
Beaus or beaux is the plural of beau. Both are acceptable, although beaux is rather old-fashioned.
Tolkien comments in his Letters #17 "No reviewer (that I have seen), although all have carefully used the correct dwarfs themselves, has commented on the fact (which I only became conscious of through reviews) that I use throughout the 'incorrect' plural dwarves. I am afraid it is just a piece of private bad grammar, rather shocking in a philologist; but I shall have to go on with it. Perhaps my dwarf - since he and the Gnome are only translations into approximate equivalents of creatures with different names and rather different functions in their own world - may be allowed a peculiar plural. The real 'historical' plural of dwarf (like teeth of tooth) is dwarrows, anyway: rather a nice word, but a bit too archaic. Still I rather wish I had used the word dwarrow."
a heterozygous gene is a gene with a genotype with two different letters. For example, Hh rather then hh, HH (which are homozygous). Hope this helps. =)
When the subject is plural rather than singular.
Those letters spell rather.