Fungi, books, feet, toes, chickens, men, women, ladies, children, mothers.
There is no plural form, not all words can be plural, and thus ends up being 'and'.
The word rural is one.muralpastoral
The plural of ya all. Which is weird since "ya all" is already a plural. I think it might mean all of you people.
No, not all words have a distinct plural possessive form. Some singular possessive forms can be used to indicate possession for both singular and plural nouns. For example, "children's" can be used for the plural possessive of "child" and "children."
In the singular "you" and "yours" in the plural "you" and "your". " Them" or "they'
All four words can be plural. "Alumnus" becomes "alumni" in the plural form when referring to male graduates. "Alumna" becomes "alumnae" in the plural form when referring to female graduates.
Cacti (cactus plural) is all I can think of
The words "chief" and "belief" both have irregular plural forms. The plural of "chief" is "chiefs," while the plural of "belief" is "beliefs." This irregularity is due to the historical development of the English language and the influence of different linguistic roots on these particular words.
The plural form of gentleman is gentlemen.
the plural form of words ending in ss, like kiss, is just adding es (kisses) (sorry, kiss was the only word ending in ss i cud think of)
They are all plural nouns.
The plural present tense of "think" is "think." For example, "They think that it is a good idea."