No. The word curious is an adjective. Only nouns and pronouns have plurals in English. If you mean curios, that is the plural of the noun curio.
No, it is a plural noun, the plural of a curiosity (odd or unusual thing). The adjective is just curious.
The word curious is an adjective, a word that describes a noun; a curious child, a curious investigator.The noun forms for the adjective curious are curiousness and curiosity.
The plural is diverticula.
The plural of bin is bins.
The plural of stimulus is stimuli.
You can't. You just go like we are curious. Curios is an adjective so we are going to need a auxiliary verb before it. Hope it helped! :D
No, it is a plural noun, the plural of a curiosity (odd or unusual thing). The adjective is just curious.
Curious the curious curious was curious because curious jr. Was not at the curious party.
Most curious
Curious is an adjective.
as curious as an infant or fish
I am very curious about ............... Fill in the blanks
The curious answer is curiosity.
curious as a cat or curious like a child
The stress on the word curious is CURious.
more curious, most curious
No, the noun 'group' is a count noun, a word with a singular and a plural form.Example:I've been assigned to the research group.Groups of curious tourists passed through all day.