About the + adjective or noun When the + adjective or noun denotes a class of people or things, is it true that if the adjective is added, the predicate will use the plural, and if the noun is added, the predicate will use the singular? The rich all not usually very happy. the polar wear doesn't eat grass. The + noun can express one kind, just like I said the polar bear doesn't eat grass. Polar bears don't eat grass

About the + adjective or noun When the + adjective or noun denotes a class of people or things, is it true that if the adjective is added, the predicate will use the plural, and if the noun is added, the predicate will use the singular? The rich all not usually very happy. the polar wear doesn't eat grass. The + noun can express one kind, just like I said the polar bear doesn't eat grass. Polar bears don't eat grass

The + adjective means a kind of person, so it is plural. And the + noun refers to this noun, such as: the man beside me is a well-known actor
In the rich, rich is not an adjective, but a noun, so what you asked is wrong
You spelled it wrong, didn't you?
The singular and plural of the following verbs have nothing to do with the preceding noun
China (adjective) ---- farm (noun) ---- box (plural) ---- see (past tense)
Chinese: the Chinese of China
Farm is not only a noun but also a verb. The noun refers to the field, and the verb means to work. The meaning of farmer in upstairs has changed, and it refers to the farmer
boxes
Saw
The phonetic sign of the noun "table" after changing from singular to plural
Tables [teiblz] n
The + adjective or noun
The British and (the Russians) wanted to build it.
The British is the + adjective list. What is the Russian? Since s is added, it must be a noun. But does it mean that Russians can't use the + noun singular?
I've only heard the + adjective form a noun, which means a kind of person!
You can't use the singular. The Russian refers to the Russian in general and the Russian in particular.
Adjective sun activity Wei
Warm (antonym) rain (adjective) snow (adjective) bright (adverb)
Write the corresponding words or phrases as required
Adjective sun activity Wei
Warm (antonym) rain (adjective) snow (adjective) bright (adverb)
Exact (adjective) exacting / exacted
Sun (adjective) sunny
Activities (plural)
Well (antonym) badly
Warm (antonym) cool
Rain (adjective) rain
Snow (adjective) snow
Bright (adverb)
Come on! Ask again if you don't understand!
The phonetic sign of strawberries
[ˈstrɔ:bəriz]
[ˈstrɔ:bəriz]
English [&; STR &;: B & ə RIZ] beauty [&; STR &; &; B & ɛ RIZ]
Is one of the + superlative followed by a noun always plural?
Yes. One of many
yes. necessary.
If it's a countable noun, the singular must be added to the plural, because it's the most... Of all
If it's uncountable, there's no plural
Countable nouns must be plural
China is one of the most beautifule countries i have ever been.
China is the most beautiful country I have ever been to.
One of the + most beautiful + countries
That's the rule
Cold (antonym) day (antonym) wet (antonym) break (adjective) fall (past tense) make (past tense)
cold - hot
Day is a noun, so there is no antonym
wet - dry
break - broken
fall - fell
make - made
Day can also be translated as day, so the relative is night
The rest is the same as above
Why not change Fe into v when giraffe becomes complex?
The plural of gifaffe is: giraffes or giraffes. To be sure, any language (except Esperanto) is a pre-existing language, and grammar is the grammar formed by the later people who have summarized and regulated the regular things in the language
Can the superlative adjective modify the plural noun
tolerable.
Confucius, Laozi and Socrates are the greatest thinkers