The Latin word nova, meaning new is applied to stars which explode due to any of several instabilities. The plural can be the Latin plural "novae" or English plural "novas".
The spelling "sleigh" is correct, applied to a sled or sledge.
The word "sclera" is applied to the white outer layer of the eyeball. Doctors would normally refer to it in the singular, like skin, even when referring to both eyes. However, the Greek plural of the noun would be sclerae.
In English, NO GENDER is applied to inanimate objects. One pencil Many pencils
That is one spelling of the word "dolly", a wheeled platform using casters or rollers, although the term is also applied to wheeled appliance handtrucks. It is also a slang children's term for a doll.
The Latin word nova, meaning new is applied to stars which explode due to any of several instabilities. The plural can be the Latin plural "novae" or English plural "novas".
The present perfect forms are have applies and has applied.Examples:We have applied for the permit. (plural subject)He has applied for the permit. (singular subject)
No, it is not an adverb. Heights is a plural noun, sometimes applied to a single landform.
Yes. But the word finishing is a gerund that normally is not a numbered noun. Only where it applied to multiple completions of processes could it be plural.
The plural form of "write" is "writes." For example, "He writes" would be the singular form, while "They write" would be the plural form.
It either means it or him depending on context
It is "director-general", as the plural is applied to the whole of the hyphenated noun.
Tha is the adjective "different" applied to a plural noun. "Las mesas diferentes" would be "the different tables".
No - because the abbreviation 'oz' can be applied in the singular or plural. 1oz and 4oz are both correct.
The spelling "sleigh" is correct, applied to a sled or sledge.
No, the correct plural possessive form for the plural noun editors-in-chief iseditors-in-chief's.example: The editors-in-chief's committee has approved my investigative series.
"Curple" applies to a "butt cheek", either of the buttocks. The plural "curples" (Scottish "cruppers") is a synonym for posterior or rump as applied to horses. (Note : many English dictionaries list neither singular nor plural.)