Wolves is already a plural noun. The singular form of wolves is wolf. A group of wolves is commonly called a pack.
No, wolves is a plural noun.
The singular possessive is wolf's.The plural possessive is wolves'.
Wolves IS a plural noun; it refers to 2 or more animals. Maybe you want a collective noun, which is different from a plural noun. Wolves live in packs, and pack would be a collective noun for wolves. A pack is a group of wolves, but pack itself is used as a singular noun. A pack is a single pack, even though it is made up of several wolves.
The possessive form for the plural noun wolves is wolves'.Example:The wolves' habitat is shrinking steadily.
A pack of wolves is singular, one pack of wolves: We can hear a pack of wolves howling at night. The plural form is packs of wolves: Several packs of wolves are vying for the same territory.
Wolves is a noun. It's the plural form of wolf.
The word wolves is the plural form of the noun wolf. The noun wolves is a common, concrete noun, a word for a predatory canine mammal, a word for a living thing.
The plural form of the noun wolf is wolves.The plural possessive form is wolves'.Example: This forest is the wolves' territory.
No, the correct plural form of the noun wolf is wolves.
Yes, the word 'wolves' is a noun, the plural form for the noun 'wolf'; a word for a type of animal; a word for a living thing.
The plural form of the noun wolf is wolves.The plural possessive form is wolves'.Example: We heard the wolves' howls in the distance.
The singular possessive form of the word "wolf" is "wolf's." In English grammar, the apostrophe followed by an 's' is used to indicate possession by a singular noun. So, if you were referring to something belonging to a single wolf, you would write "the wolf's den" or "the wolf's howl."