Life vs. Lives: Key Differences Explained
Life is the singular form: the existence of one human or organism. Lives is the plural: the combined existences of many.
We trip up because “lives” also doubles as the verb “live-z” (she lives in Tokyo). Seeing that extra -es makes writers second-guess, so they default to “life” even when they mean more than one.
Key Differences
Use life when referencing a single journey: “A long life.” Use lives for multiple journeys: “Many lives were saved.” Verb form follows subject-verb agreement: “He lives alone.”
Which One Should You Choose?
Ask: are you counting existences or describing one? If the answer is more than one, pick lives. If you’re talking about a single span or using a verb, choose life or lives accordingly.
Examples and Daily Life
Headlines: “Nine Lives of a Cat,” not “Nine Life.” Social posts: “Work-life balance” vs. “Millions of lives disrupted.” Always match the count to the word.
Is “lives” ever singular?
No. “Lives” is always plural when used as a noun. As a verb, it’s third-person singular: “She lives here.”
Why does “life” change to “lives” and not “lifes”?
English swaps the -f for -ves in some plurals (leaf → leaves, knife → knives). Life follows the same rule.
Can “lives” be possessive?
Yes. Add an apostrophe: “people’s lives’ worth” (rare, but grammatically valid).