If you have two items and wish to describe two or more similar items with one word, that one word would be plural.
ex: Item - Items
It is already stated in the question, which is items.
There are two nouns. They are women and items, both plural nouns.
There is NO PLURAL for "together" a it is NOT a noun.
"Pair" means two items; often it refers to two items that somehow belong together.
The plural form is phones.Example: I have one phone and my sister has another one; we have two phones all together.
The noun 'duo' is singular; a singing performance by two singers, a word for two people who perform together, work together as a team, or who regularly do things together. The plural form is duos. Example sentence:Batman and Robin are known as the dynamic duo.
Even though the word couple refers to two of the same thing considered together, it is not plural. The plural form is couples. Examples: We went to dinner with another couple. (singular) We went to dinner with two couples. (plural)
The word is an adjective, adverb, conjunction and a pronoun. Technically it refers to two items or people so is a "dual pronoun" when used thus. Otherwise, it is not a plural.
The plural of proof may remain as proof or be proofs.Proof: There were many items of proof that pointed to his innocence in the crime.Proofs: The photographic proofs will be ready in two hours.
It is a plural noun.
No, the plural of "item" is "items" without an apostrophe.
Joining two items with a substance (glue ) that bonds them together.