The form knives is the plural noun.
The singular noun is knife.
The irregular plural form for the noun knife is knives.
No, it is not. The word knives is a plural noun.
The plural form for the noun knife is knives.
Yes, knives is a noun, a plural, common, concrete noun. A noun is a person place or thing and knives are a thing.
The possessive form of the plural noun knives is knives'.Example: The knives' prices can be an indicator of quality.
The singular form for the plural noun knives is knife.
Yes, adding an apostrophe to the end of the plural noun knives forms the plural possessive noun knives'.Example: the knives' prices = the prices of the knives
Knives is not a proper noun (a name for a person, place, organization, or branded item), it is a plural noun.
The singular form of the plural noun knives is knife.
No, the word 'knives' is the plural form for the noun knife.A collective noun is a word used to group people or things taken together as one whole in a descriptive way.The collective noun for knives is a set of knives.
The plural of knife is knives. The F becomes a V when forming the plural, as in life-lives, half-halves, or leaf-leaves. It is a spelling change that dates to Middle English and the change of vocalization from F to V, as seen in the name Stephen's pronunciation change to Steven.
The singular possessive form for the noun knife is knife's.The plural form is knives; the plural possessive form is knives'.