No, because if you say it slow, ei-ther it is not singlular.
does that help?
It can be either
The word moss can be used either singular or plural.
"The word 'person' can be used as either singular or plural. However, it is more commonly used as singular, while 'people' is used as the plural form."
It can mean "there is" or "there are" (for either singular or plural) or even the single verb "has" for the third person singular.
"She" and "(formal singular) you" are English equivalents of the Italian word lei.Specifically, the word is a personal pronoun. It may be translated into English as either the third person singular pronoun "she" or the second person singular pronoun "you" in its formal form. Either way, the pronunciation will be a very rapidly articulated "leh-ee" in Italian.
The word "elk" is the singular noun.The plural of the noun "elk" is either elk or elks, both are accepted.
"Give (it) back!" is an English equivalent of the French word Rendez!Specifically, the French word is the present imperative form of the infinitive rendre in either the second person formal singular or the informal plural. The subject is either a polite singular "you" or the plural "you all." Either way, the pronunciation is "rawn-deh."
It depends who you are referring to. If you are talking to one person it is singular. But to a group of people it is plural.
There is no connection between the first letter of a word and its singular or plural, for example : - un hôtel (singular) / des hôtels (plural) - un oiseau (singular) / des oiseaux (plural)
"REE-dey" is the pronunciation of the Italian word Ride.Specifically, the word is a present indicative form of a verb. It serves as the formal second person singular or the third person singular. It therefore translates as either "(formal singular you) are laughing, do laugh, laugh" or "(he/it/she) does laugh, is laughing, laughs".
Kami or kamisama (more polite). It can be either god, or goddess, gender doesn't matter. It can be also either singular, or plural.
Bacterium is the singular word.