The plural form of the noun 'long' is longs, a word for a size of clothing for tall people.
Example: We have the longs displayed in a section of their own.
The word long is an adjective, and as such, it does not have a plural form. Adjectives remain the same whether describing a singular or plural noun. You can have one long string, or a thousand long strings, the word remains long.
This is shephra it means long as a plural in French
The French plural for "long" is "longs" for masculine nouns and "longues" for feminine nouns.
The plural is rangers and the plural possessive is rangers' (e.g. The rangers' uniforms were dusty from the long ride.)
If you are using walk as a noun (taking a walk, or a sidewalk), the plural is simply walks. E.g. She likes to take long walks.
The word long is an adjective, and as such, it does not have a plural form. Adjectives remain the same whether describing a singular or plural noun. You can have one long string, or a thousand long strings, the word remains long.
This is shephra it means long as a plural in French
The French plural for "long" is "longs" for masculine nouns and "longues" for feminine nouns.
The plural is rangers and the plural possessive is rangers' (e.g. The rangers' uniforms were dusty from the long ride.)
"Long" (relating to a masculine plural noun)
If you are using walk as a noun (taking a walk, or a sidewalk), the plural is simply walks. E.g. She likes to take long walks.
The plural form of the noun 'journey' is journeys.Example: The journeys of the wagon trains were long and harrowing.
In the plural, it's "sagas."
Yes. The plural is strata (both are pronounced with a long "a", as Straytum, or Strayta).
The plural form of "party" as a verb is "parties," for example: "They parties all night long."
It is the plural noun: sagas
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.