The past tense of "geese" is still "geese" as it is the plural form of "goose."
Goose can become geese. Mouse can become mice. Also, moose does not become "meese."
The words "goose" and "geese" come from Old English. "Moose" is derived from an Algonquian language, which does not follow the same pattern of pluralization as English. This is why we say "moose" for both singular and plural.
The singular possessive for "goose" is "goose's."
No, the noun geese is the plural form of the singular noun goose.The plural possessive noun is geese's.A possessive noun indicates that something in the sentence belongs to that noun.A noun that does not end with an s forms its possessive by adding an apostrophe s ('s) to the end of the word.A plural noun that does end with s forms its possessive by just adding an apostrophe (') to the end of the word.Example sentences:A lone goose glided on the pond. (singular)The boy stuck a goose's feather in his hat. (singular possessive)A flock of geese flew overhead. (plural)The geese's formation was a classic V. (plural possessive)
Goose. Geese is the plural.
The singular form is goose; the singular possessive form is goose's.The plural form is geese; the plural possessive form is geese's.
Singular: goose Plural: geese
Goose is singular - one goose. Geese is the plural form - three geese.
The singular form of the plural noun 'geese' is goose.The singular possessive form is goose's.
Geese is the plural of goose.
Singular = goosePlural = geese
Geese is the plural name for a singular goose.
Yes, the noun goose is a singular noun; the plural form is geese.
The word geese is the plural form of goose.The plural possessive form is geese's.
The noun geese is the plural form of the noun goose.
The singular form of the plural noun geese is goose.The singular possessive form is goose's.example: The boy found a goose's feather and stuck it on his hat.