Some mass nouns do have a plural form.
A number of mass nouns for substances use the plural form for 'types of' or 'kinds of', for example a menu of teas, sands of different colors, the fishes in the sea.
Some mass nouns have a different meaning in their plural form, for example, waters are specifically an area of seawater bordering on and under the control of a country; glasses are specifically drinking vessels or eye wear; goods are specifically commodities or fabric.
a) A dime bag b) you don't pluralize proper nouns.
In English, almost all nouns pluralize by adding an 's' or an 'es': dog, dogs; box, boxes.Other nouns pluralize by changing their spelling: man, men; person, people.Still others do so by adding a suffix: child, children; ox, oxen.A few, based on Latin words, change their suffix: datum, data; radius, radii.And some don't change at all: sheep, sheep; offspring, offspring.There are other ways to pluralize, but you get the idea.
"Jahre" is the plural form, meaning "years". The singular is "Jahr", year. By the way, remember to ALWAYS capitalize nouns in German. :-)
Some travel related mass nouns are:accommodationsadvicebaggageenjoymentfoodhumidityinformationinsuranceluckluggagemoneymoonlightmusicsandsunlighttransportationwaterweather
No,It is a Mass Noun. Mass nouns are nouns the can't be counted.Examples:water bloodsand grass
Yes, mass nouns and uncountable nouns both mean things that can't be broken down into units or counted.
Mass nouns are nouns that we cant count. Mass nouns like water,milk and chocolate can count so that they are called mass nouns.
Most nouns ending in -y like "company" are made plural by replacing the -y with -ies, thus "companies".
Examples of mass nouns that can be measured in watts include power, electricity, energy, and heat.
Nouns that have no plural form are called mass nouns, uncountable nouns, or non-count nouns.
Cylinders.
McDonald's