Yes. A regular plural is a word where you add an -s or -es ending Example: Cat becomes cats Dog become dogs House becomes houses Floor become floors Any word that does not follow that rule is considered irregular, such as Ox becoming Oxen Or goose becoming geese tooth --> teeth
The noun 'ox' is a singular, common, concrete noun, a word for a type of animal, a word for a thing.
ox
The noun ox is the singular form; the plural form is oxen.
The noun ox is singular; oxen is the plural form.
Ox is a noun, not a verb. It doesn't have any tenses.
The possessive singular of the singular noun ox is ox's.Example: She placed a string of bells around the ox's neck.
The noun ox is the singular form; the plural form is oxen.
The plural form of the noun ox is oxen.The plural possessive form is oxen's.Example: The oxen's owner led them to the barn.
The singular noun is ox, and the plural is oxen.(* the spelling with E reflects the variants in ax/axe)
No, the plural noun for the animal 'ox' is an irregular plural: oxen.
Ox is not the plural of oxen. Ox is singular; oxen is plural.