Yes, "lives" is an irregular plural noun. The singular form is "life," and the plural form does not follow the typical pattern of adding "-s" or "-es" to form the plural.
Sure! Here are some examples: Singular: wife Plural: wives Singular: knife Plural: knives Singular: life Plural: lives
No, "lives" is not a preposition. It is a noun (plural of "life") or a verb (third person singular present tense of "live"). Prepositions are words that show the relationship between a noun or pronoun and other words in a sentence.
Apostrophe s is used to indicate possession for nouns. For pronouns it is used exclusively to indicate the omission of a letter.So you might refer to your cousin's car, but "cousins for life" implies a friendship between multiple (plural) cousins. There would not be an apostrophe there.
The plural of 'this' is 'these' and the plural of 'that' is 'those'.
The plural for life is lives.
The plural of life is lives.
Life is a singular noun. The plural form is lives.
Life single i.e he lost his life. Life plural ie they lost their lives
The plural form for the compound noun still life is still lifes.Note: in this compound noun, the noun 'life' is treated as a regular plural.
Life Plural = Lives
You do not change live to life to make it pluralYou change life to lives to make it plural.
The plural of life is lives.The plural possessive form of lives is lives'
Data is the plural of datum, lives is the plural of life, and quails is already in plural form. The singular form is quail.
The plural form of the noun 'still life' is still lifes(or still-lifes).The plural form of changing the 'fe' to 'ves' does not apply to this compound noun.
The plural form is lives.Example sentence: Many lives were lost in the disaster.
Yes, lives is the plural for for the noun life.