tent=singular... if it finish with "s" is plural because means there is more that one!
canopies (canopy, singular)
the tent
The singular noun "barrack" is rarely used, because the term for military housing comes from the Spanish plural baracas(soldiers' tents). It is not uncommon for soldiers to refer to a building as "a barracks" (a barracks building) rather than as a barrack.
several tents is the complete subject. tents is the simple subject
camping tents hiking tents
To determine how many tents make one-fifth, you need to know the total number of tents. If, for example, there are 100 tents, then one-fifth would be 20 tents (100 divided by 5). Therefore, the number of tents that make one-fifth depends on the total number of tents you have.
There is no apostrophe in that sentence. It would be in: The scouts' tents.
Tense is a homophone for tents.
The homonym for "tense" is "tents."
Yes. tents and tense (as in nervous).
Design and make tents for camping or for living.
it was in tents lol