Is 2 singular or plural?
The numeral 2 is singular. The number two is, in English and many other languages, plural. In languages which have a dual form, the number two is dual. The word two is an adjective and as English is a mostly uninflected language, English adjectives do have a sinular and plural form.
Is were singular or plural?
Forms of Was and Were Was is used in the first person singular (I) and the third person singular (he, she, it). Were is used in the second person singular and plural (you, your, yours) and first and third person plural (we, they).
What is the plural for water?
2 Answers. Hello Tena, The noun ‘water’ is part of a category of nouns known as ‘uncountable’, which means that they do not have plural forms. However, in literature, particularly in poetry, a huge amount of water as in a storm, river flood or tidal wave, can be referred to in plural as “waters”.
What is the plural of ask?
The plural form of ask is asks.
Who is called a girl?
Woman is fine though when describing a female above the age of 18, as long as it’s not in a chauvinistic or demeaning way. And woman is likely preferred by most females that are above the age of 18. However, it’s probably more common for women above 25 to be called woman, and under 25 to be called girl.
What we can use instead of beautiful?
beautiful
- alluring.
- cute.
- dazzling.
- fascinating.
- fine.
- graceful.
- magnificent.
- marvelous.
How is their spelled?
Their is the possessive pronoun, as in “their car is red”; there is used as an adjective, “he is always there for me,” a noun, “get away from there,” and, chiefly, an adverb, “stop right there”; they’re is a contraction of “they are,” as in “they’re getting married.”
What is the plural of money?
The plural of “money” is spelt in two different ways – “monies” and “moneys”. Although “money” has this special plural form, it is still not a countable noun. A money, one money, or two monies etc. are incorrect. “Monies” is an uncountable plural noun.
What kind of verb is ask?
Ask is a verb that means to present a question to someone, to request something, or to invite someone.
Why is mice the plural of mouse?
Years ago, people who had a computer mouse in each hand could call them “mouses” or “mice.” The “mice” plural comes from a linguistic process called “umlaut.” Today’s topic is irregular plural nouns, odd nouns such as “ox” and “oxen.” Perhaps we would say some plurals that way if we were all still speaking Old English.
Is Mices a word?
2 Answers. The plural possessive noun is mice’s .
Is they’re a proper term?
They’re has an apostrophe, which means it’s the product of two words: they are. If you can substitute they are into your sentence and retain the meaning, then they’re is the correct homophone to use.