The word police is a group noun that uses a plural verb, like people. It is already plural.
"Police are canvassing the area."
"The police are investigating."
To express the singular of police, you would have to use another noun, such as policeman, policewoman, or police officer.
e.g. I reported it to the police. A policeman came and filed a report.
Pluralizing the days of the week is the same as pluralizing most other English words: Mondays Tuesdays Wednesdays Thursdays Fridays Saturdays Sundays
cheerleaders' - the apostrophe is after the pluralizing "s"
No, the word "sees" does not require an apostrophe. The apostrophe is used to show possession or omission of letters, not for pluralizing verbs.
No, the word "women" is not irregular. It follows the typical pattern of pluralizing nouns ending in "-man" by changing the ending to "-men."
The plural word for "ignoramus" is "ignoramuses".You might expect it to be "ignorami" because the word originates in Latin, but "ignoramus" is not a noun: it is a verb. So instead of using the Latin rule for pluralizing nouns, we simply use the English rule for pluralizing words that end with an "s".Thus, "ignoramus" becomes "ignoramuses".
pros and cons is the correct noun
And a few words, like hobo, can take either form. Potatoes and tomatoes probably became -es words long ago by analogy with the word toes. Words like photos and pros are abbreviations, and words like solos and studios and folios are foreign.
probably for the same reason i say greetings salutations cheers congrats kudos oops yikes etc pluralizing intensifies an idea even if it doesnt actually multiply it
If showing a day's possession, yes. (e.g. Tuesday's child) If pluralizing a day of the week, no. (e.g. two Mondays)
Well the most obvious one is the very basic pluralizing suffix 's'.
Police are
The duration of Police Police is 133.20000000000002 seconds.