The noun oxygen is a singular, uncountable noun, a word with no plural form.
The plural possessive noun of molecules is molecules' .
The possessive form for the noun oxygen is oxygen's.
Glues is the plural of glue
singular: gas plural: gases
The plural form of the noun laboratory is laboratories.The plural possessive form is laboratories'.
The noun oxygen is an uncountable noun, a word for a substance, an element. Oxygen has no plural form.
noun
Yes, the word "air" is a noun or a verb.The noun air is a word for the atmosphere, or the "air" or feel of a location.The verb "to air" means to present or show, or to place in the air for cooling, freshening, or cleaning.
The noun 'shoe' is a countable noun, the plural form is shoes.A countable noun is a noun that has both a singular and a plural form.An uncountable noun is a singular noun that has no plural form (such as education or oxygen) or a plural noun that has no singular form (such as news or clothes).
The noun 'onlooker' is a single compound word, the plural is onlookers.
The noun 'onlooker' is a single compound word, the plural is onlookers.
The noun 'clientele' is singular, a word for clients collectively, customers considered as a group. There is no plural form.
The noun 'fungi' is the plural form of the noun 'fungus'.
The plural form of nouns is used to indicate more than one person, place, thing, or idea. To form the plural of most nouns in English, simply add -s or -es to the singular form.
The noun audience is a singular, common noun. The noun audience is also a collective noun.
A single invitation is different from plural invitations.
There is no plural form for mankind. The noun mankind is an uncountable (mass) noun, a word for all humans considered as a single group, a word for a concept.