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Student tables at one University in Canada are 60 inches wide and 20 inches deep and two students sit at each table in a typical lecture room.
Logarithmic tables.
The noun 'table' is a count noun: one table, two tables.
There is no such number since there are infinitely many multiples in the table for each of an infinite number of tables.
6 tables will be left out without atleast 1 person...
Altar table communion tables credence table offertory tables holiness tables side church tables
Using the present value table will help many students determine the best answer for business problems quicker. With basic information, students can use the table to find the solution.
Student tables at one University in Canada are 60 inches wide and 20 inches deep and two students sit at each table in a typical lecture room.
Logarithmic tables.
The plural for that table is "those tables".
The plural of the noun "table" is "tables."
Yes, the word 'table' is a noun, (table, tables) and a verb (table, tables, tabling, tabled).The noun 'table' is a word for a piece of furniture; an orderly arrangement of facts or figures in rows or columns for quick reference; a word for a thing.
In order to form possessive nouns, an apostrophe is needed, as well as the letter s for singular nouns.For example, if you are referring to the surface of the table, you would write the table's surface.If there were several tables, it would be tables' surfaces.Some words where the singular noun changes form to become a plural will require the 's also, e.g. children's toys
a row of tables
tables
Yes, as it has an s on the end. One table. Two tables.
la table (fem.)