No, the noun body's is the possessive form of the singular noun body.
Example: The police have not determined the body's identity.
The plural form of the noun body is bodies.
The plural possessive form of "house" is "houses'".
The plural of "grand-mère" in French is "grand-mères."
The plural form of the noun village is villages.The plural possessive form is villages'.Example: The villages' proximity allowed them to pool their resources.
Examples of nouns ending in -sion and their plural form:admission, admissionsconversion, conversionsdecision, decisionsdelusion, delusionsdivision, divisionsexpression, expressionsimpression, impressionsmansion, mansionsmission, missionsoccasion, occasionsprofession, frofessionsversion, versions
No, deeded is not a word whoever asked this question because deeded is already pural. Of course "deeded" is a word. The asker is referring to the verb "deed", not the noun "deed" hence its pluraliity has no bearing as a verb cannot be plural. "The grandfather deeded his house to his grandson."
it is the pural of nucleus it is the pural of nucleus
cyclones
watches
Volcanoes.
taxes
Tomatoes is correct.
The two contrasting images in the story are
Leuk-
The pural of man of war is men of war.
Singular. "Porpoises" is the pural version of porpoise.
Water.
those:a pural of thatthose shoes are fantastic