The plural of moose is moose. It stays the same.
Additional Information
Contrary to what urbandictionary.com believes, the plural of "moose" is "moose," and not "meese." This definition has been acquired from the Official Scrabble Players' Dictionary.
There are no "mooses" or "meese".
Examples
I see there are eight moose over there.
I see there is a moose over there.
A moose is eating grass.
The moose are eating grass.
Look, there's a moose! There's two moose over there."
A moose stood quietly near the edge of the trees.
Two moose stood quietly near the edge of the trees.
Moose is one of the words in English that the singular and the plural are the same word. Example sentences: A moose was standing near the edge of the trees. (singular) Two moose were standing near the edge of the trees. (plural)
Fawns is the proper plural form of fawn. Although a fawn is a baby deer, the plural of deer is deer --no s at the end. So, a dozen fawns are a lot of deer (not deers).
Yes there is. Believe it or not, the plural of moose is simply moose.Moose is one of the words in English that the singular and the plural are the same word.Example sentences:A moose was standing near the edge of the trees. (singular)Two moose were standing near the edge of the trees. (plural)Contrary to popular belief, Meese, Moosen, and Mooses simply aren't words.
Deer, sheep, moose, salmon, and trout are both plural and singular nouns.
Goose is from the Germanic root, and its plural was adopted into Old English as "geese". This is an abnormal plural.Moose is of Algonquin (Amerindian) origin and has a plural of "moose".(The listing in the Urban Dictionary is obviously intended as humor.)The word "moose" came to us from Algonquian Indians. Consequently its plural, instead of being "mooses" or "meese", is the same as the singular "moose." That is true of most Indian names whether of a tribe, such as the Winnebago and Potawatomi, or of an object such as papoose. It is also true of many wildlife names not of Indian origin -- for example: deer, mink and grouse.
The plural of moose is moose. Unlike many nouns in English, the word "moose" is both singular and plural, meaning it does not change when referring to more than one moose.
The plural form for moose is moose because it follows a rare pattern called "no change" where the word remains the same in both singular and plural form.
The plural possessive of "moose" is "moose's" instead of "mooses'" because "moose" forms its plural by changing its internal structure (irregular plural). "Moose" does not add an "s" when pluralized, so the possessive form simply adds an apostrophe followed by an "s" to indicate ownership by multiple moose.
Moose is one of the words in English that the singular and the plural are the same word. Example sentences: A moose was standing near the edge of the trees. (singular) Two moose were standing near the edge of the trees. (plural)
both, like the plural of moose is moose
The plural form for the noun moose is moose. The singular and the plural possessive form are also the same: moose's.EXAMPLES:A moose's antlers was spotted in the tall brush.We saw a group of moose's tracks in the road.
Moose is one of the words in English that the singular and the plural are the same word.Examples:A moose was standing near the edge of the trees. (singular)Two moose were standing near the edge of the trees. (plural)
Its just moose . The plural for moose is moose .
The plural for "moose" is still "moose".
the literary term for multiple moose, or the plural of moose, is moose. e.g I have a herd of moose. it sounds alot better then I have a herd of mooses. so the plural is moose.
Actually, the real plural of "moose" is "meese". The only time people really use the word "meese" is for scientific purposes. That is why people now just say "moose" as the plural because it sounds wierd saying "meese".
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