Yes.
Fruits is a French equivalent of the English word "fruits." The masculine plural noun may be used figuratively, literally, or symbolically. The pronunciation will be "frwee" in French.
Fruits.
Fruit is singular. Fruits is plural.
In French, the word for fruit is "fruit," which is masculine. Therefore, it uses masculine articles and adjectives, such as "le fruit" for "the fruit." However, when referring to fruits in plural, the term "fruits" is also masculine, as in "les fruits" for "the fruits."
The plural of kiwi (bird, fruits) is kiwis.
The plural of "un fruit" in French is "des fruits".
The Latin word for berries is "bacca" (singular) and "baccae" (plural). It is used in various contexts in classical texts to refer to small fruits or berries. In botanical terminology, this term can also be related to the classification of certain types of fruits.
The word crises is a plural word; it is the plural form of the word crisis.
There is no plural word for if.
The noun 'fruit' as a word for a food substance is an uncountable noun.The plural form 'fruits' is used exclusively for 'types of' or 'kinds of'; for example:The fruits needed for this recipe are cherries and blueberries.
Fruits by the foot.
The plural form for the demonstrative pronoun this is these.