Yes, the word schools is the plural of the noun school.
It is also the present tense conjugation, third-person singular for the verb to school.
(e.g. The master schools his apprentices in Martial Arts.)
An example of a singular noun for a school could be "institution."
The plural possessive form of "teachers" is "teachers'".
The plural form of the noun teacher is teachers.The plural possessive form is teachers'.Example: We have a new coffee maker in the teachers'lounge.
The possessive plural form of "curriculum" is "curricula's".
The plural possessive form of "theory" is "theories'".
No. Schooling is the present participle, or gerund form, of the verb to school (to teach). It does not have a plural.
The plural form of the singular noun 'school' is schools.
Yes, the word "teachers" is a plural noun. It refers to individuals who educate and instruct students in schools or other educational settings.
An example of a singular noun for a school could be "institution."
No, the plural noun 'academics' is a word for people who teach or do research at a college or university; a word for people.
The plural noun is halves.
The plural possessive form of "school" is "schools'".
The plural noun for path is paths. The plural noun for patch is patches.
The plural noun of general is generals. Generals is a regular plural noun.
No, Mice is a plural noun. Mouse is the singular noun.
The plural is schools. The plural possessive form is schools' (apostrophe only).
Both are correct.The spelling schools' is the possessive form of the plural noun schools.The spelling school's is the possessive form of the singular noun school.Examples:Both of our schools' teams will be in the finals. (plural possessive, the teams of two schools)Our school's mascot is at every game. (singular possessive, the mascot of one school)