Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Tourist attractions - Those are Norwegian tourists, aren't they?

Those are Norwegian tourists, aren't they?

"Those are Norwegian tourists" is right, which means "Those are Norwegian tourists".

This is the sentence pattern of the verb "those +be", which belongs to the plural form. Those sums are all plural forms. Norwegian Norwegian means that tourists are the plural form of tourists, which corresponds to the previous plural usage, so it is correct.

Keywords: tourists

Explanation:

Tourists; (American) migrant workers who work in the south in winter (plural of tourist)

Verb (abbreviation of verb) tourism; Sightseeing (third person singular of tourists)

Phrases:

Tourism resources? tourist resources

Tourism? tourism

Tourist destination? Tourist attractions; Tourist destination; Scenic spots/tourist attractions

Usage:

Tourists usually refer to people who travel for entertainment or recreation. Used in sports, it can refer to "athletes who take part in touring competitions".

Visitors can modify other nouns as attributes in sentences.

Example:

Answer? Passing by? Tourists? Hey? That? An emergency.

A passing tourist photographed the incident.