"Louse" is singular, and the plural form is "lice."
Louse is already singular. The plural is lice.
The singular noun is "louse" and the plural noun is "lice."
The plural possessive form of the word "louse" is "lice's."
Yes, that's correct. The singular form is "louse" and the plural form is "lice."
"Louse" is singular, and the plural form is "lice."
It already is singular. The plural form is louse.
the word 'lice' is plural of 'louse'
Louse is already singular. The plural is lice.
The singular noun is "louse" and the plural noun is "lice."
The plural possessive form of the word "louse" is "lice's."
In English there are no masculine or feminine forms. English uses gender specific nouns for male or female.The noun 'louse' is a common gender noun, a word for a male or a female insect.There are no gender specific nouns for a male louse or a female louse, they are referred to as a male or a female.
Louse (cinifes) is a 3rd Declension Feminine (Yes, Romans were blatantly sexist) noun. Thus: cinifes -- the/a louse (subject)---------Nominative Singular cinifis -- of the louse/ the louse's------Genitive Singular cinifi -- to/for the louse-------------------Dative Singular cinifem -- a louse (direct object)--------Accusative Singular cenife -- by/with/from the louse--------Ablative Singular cinifes -- the lice (subject)-------------Nominative Plural cinifum -- of the lice---------------------Genitive Plural cinifibus -- to/for the lice---------------Dative Plural cinifes -- the lice (direct object)-------Accusative Plural cinifibus -- by/with/from the lice------Ablative Plural
Yes, louse is singular. Lice is the plural form.
mice is the plural of mouse and lice is the plural of louse
mice is the plural of mouse and lice is the plural of louse
Singular ; louse / mouse Plural ; lice / mice.