No, it is a possessive noun. Mothers is a plural noun.
the plural noun is feet :)
Opposites is the plural noun.
No, the word cup is a singular noun. The plural noun is cups.
The noun safe is singular; safes is the plural noun."None of the safes were broken into."
The plural form of the noun orange is oranges.The plural possessive form is oranges'.Example: The oranges' bag split and the oranges rolled down the steps.
The noun 'oranges' is the plural form for the noun orange, a common, concrete noun; a word for a thing.
The plural of orange is oranges.
The plural form of "orange" is "oranges."
The plural of orange is oranges.
To form a plural noun, you generally add an "s" to the end of the singular noun. For example, "cat" becomes "cats" in plural form. Some nouns may have irregular plural forms that don't follow this rule.
The pronoun for oranges would be "they." In English grammar, pronouns are used to refer to nouns, and "they" is the appropriate pronoun for plural nouns like oranges. It helps avoid repetition in sentences and makes the language more concise and clear.
The noun 'orange' is a singular noun, a word for one piece of fruit, a word for one color. The plural noun is oranges.Examples:Mom put an orange in my lunch box. (singular)The pumpkins were a nice shade of orange. (singular, one shade)I took a photo of the bowl of oranges. (plural)
No, the word 'lanterns' is the plural form of the noun 'lantern', a word for a portable light with a protective covering.A collective noun is a noun used to group people or things in a descriptive way; for example:a crowd of onlookersa flock of geesa grove of oranges
There is no specific collective noun for mandarin oranges, in which case a noun that suits the situation is used, for example, a bag of mandarin oranges, a box of mandarin oranges, a bushel of mandarin oranges, etc.
There is no standard collective noun for oranges, in which case a noun that suits the situation is used, for example, a bagof oranges, a box of oranges, a crate of oranges, etc.
Arance e limoni is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "oranges and lemons." The first above-mentioned feminine plural noun refers only to the fruit whereas the second feminine plural noun -- after the conjunction -- references both the fruit and the lemon-yellow color. The pronunciation will be "a-RAN-tchey lee-MO-nee" in Italian.