As you are using the plural, that means you are talking about the fruit so here it is a plural noun. If you use 'orange' in the singular that could mean the fruit or the colour of the fruit. In the second case it would be an adjective.
Orange (the fruit and the color) is a noun (or adjective) and does not have tenses like past, present, and future. Tense applies to the verb. The oranges will roll down the hill The oranges are rolling down the hill The oranges rolled down the hill Same oranges
Oranges
oranges are the BEST!!!!!
I just love to buy the juciest oranges. We make the tastiest juice with them. But, those little tangelos are not the juciest oranges around. You have to get the biggest naval oranges to have the juciest liquid come out of them. We make the juciest orange juice that is the tastiest. The tangelos are the driest and untastiest. You add est or iest to get the superlative of an adjective.
A "score" of anything is twenty of that thing. So a score of oranges equals twenty oranges.
Fifteen apples and seven oranges.
There is no standard collective noun for oranges, in which case a noun that suits the situation is used, for example, a bagof oranges, a box of oranges, a crate of oranges, etc.
Valencia? These are JUICE oranges!
2 dozen of oranges = 24 oranges.
6 Oranges in a kilo
The literal translation is... petite oranges
30 oranges for $5.00 ( 6 oranges for $1.00 )