yes
Some examples of words that stay the same in singular and plural form are: sheep, deer, moose, and fish. These words are known as "unchangeable plurals" because they do not change in form when pluralized.
no
Yes, words that keep the same form in singular and plural are considered irregular plurals. Examples include sheep, deer, and aircraft.
Examples of words that do not change from singular to plural are:aircraftdeerelkfishmooseoffspringsalmonspacecrafttroutyouyouryoursThere are a number of nouns that are included in lists of nouns with the same singular and plural form. However, most of those are uncountable nouns, words that have no singular or have no plural form (such as luggage or barracks),; or mass nouns that are words for substances or aggregate nouns (such as oxygen or luggage). Some lists include binary nouns, words for things made up of two parts that make up the whole (such as pants or scissors). These are not true singular and plural forms. Note: The noun 'fish' is a singular, uncountable noun as a word for a food substance. The plural form of the noun fish as a word for individual creatures is fish or fishes, both are correct plural forms.
Yes and no. It stays the same (as some other foreign words) if you follow the rules of classic ortograph. It takes the plural mark (an additional 's') if you follow the prescriptions of the ortographic reform of 1990.
Martial Arts
"Told" is a verb. It is already in proper form to be used with a plural noun. Example: They told him to go home. We told him to stay.
There are no real plural forms of those words. Rose would stay "bara" and ribbon would stay "ribon."
Some nouns that stay the same when used in the plural are:aircraftcorpsdeerheadquartersmathematicsoffspringpoliceseriessheepswineAnother group of nouns that doesn't change when plural are the nouns that are short for 'a pair of'. Most of the time we don't use the entire phrase, we just use the noun; for example:one pair of binoculars, two pairs of binocularsone pair of glasses, two pairs of glassesone pair of pajamas, two pairs of pajamasone pair of pants, two pairs of pantsone pair of shorts, two pairs of shortsone pair of scissors, two pairs of scissorsone pair of tongs, two pairs of tongsone pair of trousers, two pairs of trousersone pair of tweezers, two pairs of tweezers
No, it is not a preposition. The word stays can be a plural noun. It can also be a present tense form of the verb "to stay" (all meanings).
I don't know what rule applies here, but when we say, 'There are four McDonald's in our town.' we don't change McDonald's when it's more than one. I would say that the plural of Applebee's is used the same way. Perhaps like sheep or pants, singular or plural, they stay the same.
"Fish", "sheep", and "trout" are three exceptions to the -s/-es rule for making words plural. Most nouns, such as "sock" and "box", can be made plural by adding -es or -s to the end (sock would become socks and box would become boxes). Certain nouns, such as moose and the above three nouns, stay the same in spelling for both singular and plural spelling. Our English language can be very confusing!