Parenthesis is singular. Parentheses is plural
Plural is more than singular. Singular is only one and plural means more than one.
No, the singular is alumna and the plural is alumnae.The other forms are the singular alumnus and the plural alumni.
Problem is singular, not plural. The plural form is problems.
Parentheses IS the plural form. The singular is parenthesis.
its singular if you want it to be plural then its heroes or if you want it to be a female hero (singular) then its heroine
You want = Du willst (informal, singular) You want = Ihr wollt (informal, plural) You want = Sie Wollen (formal, singular & plural)
No, because there are not 100 plural pronouns.The plural pronouns are:weusyou (can be singular or plural)theythemthesethoseouroursyour (can be singular or plural)yours (can be singular or plural)theirtheirsourselvesyourselvesthemselvesbothfewfewermanyothersseveralall (can be singular or plural)any (can be singular or plural)more (can be singular or plural)most (can be singular or plural)none (can be singular or plural)some (can be singular or plural)such (can be singular or plural)
practitioner is singular (plural practitioners)sofa is singular (plural sofas)satellite is singular (plural satellites)clips is plural (singular clip)dentist is singular (plural dentists)dollars is plural (singular dollar)article is singular (plural articles)magazines is plural (singular magazine)laminator is singular (laminators is plural)radios is plural (singular radio)
No it's singular but if you want it plural you can add an s on the end.
singular and plural
Singular: book / Plural: books Singular: cat / Plural: cats Singular: child / Plural: children Singular: foot / Plural: feet
Are is plural. "Is" is singular. For example, "There is a glove on the chair". That is singular. "There are gloves on the chair". That is plural.
Either "Was willst du?" (singular/informal), "Was wollt ihr?" (plural/informal) or "Was wollen Sie?" (singular and plural/formal).
"Has" is singular, e.g. He has, she has. "Have" is plural, e.g. They have, we have. The exception is "I" - e.g. I have.
singular Singular: plural is coats
The word team is singular; the plural form is teams.