Itineraries is the plural of itinerary
The root word for itinerary is "iter," which is a Latin word meaning "journey" or "route."
A scrapbook belonging to my one friend is my friend's scrapbook.A scrapbook belonging to several of my friends is my friends' scrapbook.When a plural is made into a possessive AND that plural itself was formed by adding an s, one only needs to add an apostrophe.Ex: The itinerary for your class would be your class's itinerary. (Add an 's' because the last 's' in class is not making it plural.)Ex: The itinerary for your classes is your classes' schedule. (Don't add an 's', because one was added to make it plural.)(And by "itinerary" I mean "syllabus", but I don't know the plural of "syllabus".)
Itinerary - route (often with details of stops, etc).
schedule
This is likely the word "itinerary" (a schedule or plan of a journey).
well lets see whats on todays itinerary shall we?
No, the noun seaports is the plural form for the noun seaport.A collective noun is a word used to group nouns, for example a string of seaports or an itinerary of seaports.
The word crises is a plural word; it is the plural form of the word crisis.
An itinerary is a word that means where you stay on a trip. An itinerary is a travel plan that lists schedule, timetable, agenda, program, tour, and routes taken.
An itinerary is a schedule of planned visits
Itineraire is a word in the French language. When translated to the English language it becomes "Itinerary" which is a document or schedule of planned travel.
There is no plural word for if.