Sphinx is the singular form, the plural forms are sphinxes or sphinges.
The word originated from Greek mythology, denoting a winged monster and is possibly derived from the Greek word sphingein, meaning draw tight.
The singular form of the demonstrative pronoun 'these' is this.
The singular form of "that" is "it."
"Stratum" is the singular form of stratum. The plural form is "strata".
A singular form of dice is a die
The singular form of Oases is, Oasis.
The singular possessive of "sphinx" is "sphinx's." This form indicates that something belongs to a single sphinx. For example, you might say, "The sphinx's riddle was difficult to solve."
'The sphinx' or 'Sphinx' may be English equivalents of 'le sphinx'.The masculine singular definite article 'le' means 'the'. The masculine noun 'sphinx' means 'sphinx' in the singular. Together, they're pronounced 'luh sfehnks'.
'Sfinge' is a Spanish equivalent of the 'sphinx'.The feminine noun 'sfinge' means 'sphinx' in the singular. Its definite article is 'la' ['the'] in the singular. Its indefinite article is 'una' ['a, one'] in the singular. It's pronounced 'SFEEN-heh'.
The plural form for a nouns that ends with -nx, such as sphinx, the plural form is sphinxes; add -es after the -nx.
'The sphinx' or 'Sphinx' may be English equivalents of 'la sfinge'.The feminine singular definite article 'la' means 'the'. The feminine singular indefinite article 'una' means 'a, one'. The feminine noun 'sfinge' means 'sphinx' in the singular. Together, they're pronounced 'lah SFEEN-djeh'.
'Sfinge' is an Italian equivalent of the 'sphinx'.It's a feminine noun whose definite article is 'la'['the'] in the singular. The indefinite article is 'una'['a, one'] in the singular. It's pronounced 'SFEEN-djeh'.
The singular form of the demonstrative pronoun 'these' is this.
'The sphinx' or 'Sphinx' may be English equivalents of 'a sfinge'.The feminine singular definite article 'a' means 'the'. The feminine noun 'sfinge' means 'sphinx' in the singular. Together, they're pronounced 'ah ee-SHFEEN-djee' in continental Portuguese and according to the carioca accent of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
The singular form of "that" is "it."
The singular form is cuff.
it is already in its singular form.
"Stratum" is the singular form of stratum. The plural form is "strata".