With an -es, yes. Fish is used as both a singular and plural, but "fishes" is a variant plural form and is sometimes used to imply "multiple kinds of fish" as opposed to "multiple fish of the same kind."
It could be either just the word "fish" or it could be the word "fishes" it's more common to use the word "fish" if it's a lot of the same kind of fish and we use "fishes" if it's a lot of different kinds of fish.
A "school of fish" is an example of a collective noun.
I flayed the fish, for example.
the fish was born demented.
Yes, you get credit for the entire new word (but do not get credit for any covered bonus squares).
As any other fish of the water, they use there gills to breath.
A predatory fish. A Predator. A carnivore. A carnivorous fish. You could use any.
A suffix is put at the end of a word to change something about the word like its use.
Any bait can catch some fish at sometime. Grapes though are not a good bait for fish in general as they are not a natural food of any fish.
Oh the word fish comes from the ancient Latin word frisco, and now we use fish today. :)
Yes, you can use an apostrophe S after any word -- even words that end in Z. The exception is for words that end in S because they are plural. In this case, the apostrophe goes at the end of the word. Examples: John's house Cats' tails
This fish is so abnormal.