The word "salmon" is both singular and plural.
Salom
salmons is the plural way but salmon is the singular way
Either salmon or salmons is correctly used as the plural of salmon.(Salmons is rare in standard English but accepted, especially when talking about several type of salmon. There are dialects that do use salmons regularly)When you speak of more than one salmon, you can change the phrasing to indicate the plural. For example; 'There are many salmon in the river' or 'We caught a lot of salmon today'.Like 'sheep' and 'deer' and 'fish', salmon may be both plural and singular. Unlike sheep, the plural salmons is also used, as is the plural fishes, and more rarely the plural deers.
the singular word it is salmon.
It can be either. The plural of salmon may be either salmon or salmons.
Words that are the same in the singular and plural:scissorsinformationsheepmusicnewstrousersheadquartersgolddeeroffspring
its both.
i love a salmon denotes to a singular person where i love salmon denotes a group and i love salmons denotes to all the the salmons.
SALMON, it can be both plural and singular. SO be careful when ordering and try not to say "I WANT SALMON" because you should've of said "I WANT ONE/A SALMON" OK? because then you will get more then you want! LOTS OF FISHIES! well ok. that's it. and if im wrong then use GOOGLE! byee:)
The singular form of the demonstrative pronoun 'these' is this.
The singular form of "cuffs" is cuff.
The singular form of "stratum" is "stratum." The word does not change in its singular form.
The singular form of feet is foot.