plural
To show something is possessed by one owner, add an apostrophe and the letter 's' to the owner. e.g. the cat's milk. (the milk belongs to the cat) To show possession of plural owners you usually only need to add an apostrophe as most plurals already end in 's'. If the plural doesn't end in 's' then add the apostrophe followed by the 's'.
Uncountable nouns are singular and usually have no plural form. Of course, there are exceptions, but for the most part uncountable nouns are singular. Some examples of uncountable nouns are:water, tea, coffee, milk, oilbread, butter, cheese, meatair, steam, smoke, smog, pollutionrice, flour, sugar, salt, pepperluggage, furniture, traffic, money, homework, mailhappiness, love, honesty, knowledge, peace, music, experienceEnglish, French, Spanishaluminum, copper, oxygen, hydrogenwater, soil, sand, concreteslang, vocabularyart, philosophy, law, sciencesoccer, football, chessweather, thunder, rain, snow, darknessA notable exception is that the plural form for food and substances is reserved for 'types of' or 'kinds of'; for example:...a variety of foods such as flour, meat, rice, milk, etc....a menu of teas including black, green, jasmine, oolong, etc....some properties to consider when selecting concretes are water content and sulfate resistance....a number of sands are used in construction, very fine, fine, medium, coarse, and very coarse.
"More" is the comparative form of "much", although "more" can also be used for other purposes, such as forming the comparative of adjectives pronounced with more than two syllables, and both can be used as adverbs. Both can be used as nouns, but if so used, they are almost always followed immediately by a prepositional phrase beginning with "of". When used as an adjective, "much" should modify a noun that is either formally singular or is idiomatically regarded as singular, even if plural in form. If a modified noun is plural, its adjective should be "many" instead of "much". The antonym of "many" should be "fewer", not "less", which is the antonym of "more".
There are two major groups of nouns called count nouns and uncountable (or mass) nouns. The majority of nouns are count nouns.Count nouns are words that have both singular and plural forms; some examples are:apple, applesboy, boyscow, cowsdesk, desksegg, eggsfrog, frogsUncountable nouns, words that don't have plural forms, fall into several types:nouns for substances aluminumconcretefloursandteawaterNote: The plural form for many substance nouns are used for 'types of' or 'kinds of'; for example, sands include molding sand, concrete sand, graded sane; a selection of teas include black tea, green tea, oolong tea, herbal tea. abstract nouns for concepts advicebraverycourageinformationknowledgetrustUncountable nouns also include aggregate nouns, words for things comprised of an indefinite number of parts. Aggregate nouns have no singular form; some examples include:congratulationsgoodsmeansnewsseriesthanksAnother group of nouns that appear to be a plural form but are used as both singular and plural, are a shortened form for 'a pair of', called binary nouns; words for things that are made up of two parts to form the whole. Examples are:glasses: one pair of glasses, two pairs of glassesbinoculars: one pair of binoculars, two pairs of binocularspants: one pair of pants, two pairs of pantspajamas: one pair of pajamas, two pairs of pajamasscissors: one pair of scissors, two pairs of scissorstweezers: one pair of tweezers, two pairs of tweezers
The correct way to say the sentence is "They drank their milk." "Drunk" is the past participle of "drink" and should not be used in this context.
singular
Singular
Singular possessive: mother's milk Plural possessive: mothers' milk
Cow is singular. Cows is plural. They both mean a fully grown female of a domestic breed of ox used as milk or meat.
"is" is used for 3d person singular or uncountablee.g: Anna is pretty (singular) orThe milk is in the fridge (uncountable)"are" is for 2nd person singular and plural or 3rd person plurale.g: You are late again (2nd singular/ plural) orAnna's parents are Swedish (3rd plural)Although in the U.S. you might hear the phrase "there is many people" ( is + plural) which is grammatically wrong but it's used in everyday speechHope I helped
The number of liters in a milk carton is dependent on the size of the milk carton. A half gallon milk carton would have 1.9 Liters.
0.500 gallons of mile is about 1.892 liters.
babies drink or feeding milk, not eat milk? drinking milk around 0.5 liters to 1 liter.
Yes, a large jug of milk can be measured in liters. Liters are a common unit of volume measurement used for liquids like milk. The volume of the jug would indicate how many liters of milk it can hold.
No, a full jug of milk typically contains around 3.78 liters, not 0.50 liters.
1.8925 liters.
The noun 'physics' is an uncountable noun, a type of aggregate noun, a word representing an indefinite number of elements or parts.The noun 'physics' takes a verb for the singular: Physics is my major.