The plural of thought is thoughts.
As in "their thoughts were real".
Yes, "thoughts" is the plural form of the noun "thought." It refers to multiple ideas or mental processes occurring in one's mind.
No, it is a noun. It is the direct noun form of the adjective thoughtful.
The plural of conscience is consciences.
The plural of responsibility is responsibilities.
The plural form for the noun epiphany is epiphanies.
Sure they can. Thought is one and the plural is thoughts.
I thought that the nominative plural for the word 'forum' was 'forii'... is this correct?
The plural form for the noun planner is planners.Example: The party planners did an outstanding job, they thought of everything.
Series is plural, though often times used to describe what is thought of a singular event.
Yes, "thoughts" is the plural form of the noun "thought." It refers to multiple ideas or mental processes occurring in one's mind.
Yes, it is a noun. It is a plural noun for differences in opinion or thought.
The word thoughts is a noun. It is the plural form of thought.
Examples of possessive forms for singular and plural units of time:an hour's layover (singular)two hours' layover (plural)a year's assignment (singular)two years' assignment (plural)a moment's fright (singular)two seconds' thought (plural)
No, it is a noun. It is the direct noun form of the adjective thoughtful.
"To Think" is a verb. Verbs cannot be singular or plural as you can't have a number of "thinks." You can think many thoughts or just one thought, but thinking is strictly an action word.
The plural of the noun woof is woofs.Words ending in a consonant are usually pluralized by adding an S. ("While trying to find his dog, Jim thought he heard several 'woofs' coming from the woods.")
I thought measles was already the singular word. For example, "He has measles." Measles is already plural as well. For example, "They all have measles."