noun that are plural in form but singular in meaning
"Book" is a noun that has both a singular and plural form: "book" (singular) and "books" (plural).
The noun 'syllabus' is the singular form. The plural forms are syllabi or syllabuses, both are accepted.
The word "lamina" is singular. The plural form is "laminae."
You seem to have the singular and the plural lumped into one word. The singular is diagnosis; the plural is diagnoses. They are the singular and plural forms of a common, abstract noun.
Yes, the plural noun 'feet' is an irregular plural.The singular noun is 'foot'.A regular plural is a noun that forms its plural by adding an -s or an -es to the end of the word.A irregular plural noun forms its plural in some other way.
The singular form of "sheep" is also "sheep." It remains the same in both singular and plural forms.
You seem to have the singular and the plural lumped into one word. The singular is diagnosis; the plural is diagnoses. They are the singular and plural forms of a common, abstract noun.
The noun 'syllabus' is the singular form. The plural forms are syllabi or syllabuses, both are accepted.
The noun friends is the plural form for the singular noun friend.The possessive forms are friend's (singular) and friends' (plural).
The word singular is an adjective. Adjectives do not have singular or plural forms; adjectives have comparative forms: positive: singular comparative: more singular superlative: most singular
The word "lamina" is singular. The plural form is "laminae."
The noun memorandum is singular; the plural forms are memoranda or memorandums.
"Formula" is singular; the plural forms is formulae or formulas.
Pence (UK) and pennies (US) are the plural forms for the singular noun penny.
The noun forms are:premonition (singular)premonitions (plural)
The noun 'buffalo' is an uncountable noun, used as both singular and plural.There are three accepted plural forms of the noun buffalo:buffalo (an uncountable noun)buffalosbuffaloes
The word 'neurologic' is an adjective.Adjectives don't have singular and plural form.The word 'neurologic' is the adjective form of the noun 'neurology'.The noun 'neurology' is an uncountable noun.
Octopi and octopuses are both accepted plural forms for the singular octopus.