Leaves is the plural of the noun leaf. Example sentence:
The leaves blew gently in the breeze.
The leaves of the book were folded and stained.
We had to put two leaves in the table to accommodate the entire family.
The word leaf is also a verb: leaf, leafs, leafing, leafed. Example sentence:
We can leaf through these reports to see if they contain the information we need.
Not to be confused with the verb to depart: leave, leaves, leaving, left.
The plural form of the noun 'leaf' is leaves.The plural form of the noun phrase is cheque leaves.
The plural form for the noun leaf is leaves.
There is no plural form. Do and Do not are verbs
The plural of "sentence" is "sentences."
The plural form for table leaf is table leaves.
The plural form for the sentence, "Who is she?" is "Who are they?"
The possessive form of "leaf" is "leaf's." In English grammar, to show possession or ownership of something singular, we typically add an apostrophe and an "s" after the noun. So, if you are referring to something that belongs to a leaf, you would write "the leaf's color" or "the leaf's shape."
The singular possessive of leaf is leaf's.Example: The leaf's colour changed from green to orange as autumn approached.
The plural form is, 'The elves slept in leaves.'
The plural form that is not correct: leafsThe correct plural form for the noun leaf is leaves.
The singular of leaf is leaf, and the plural is leaves.
We use are when the sentence is in plural and is when the sentence is in singular form.