If referring to the people, English is a plural, "You brave English." Or, you could say, "You brave Englishmen," (or Englishwomen, I suppose).
If referring to dialects of the English Language (Cockney, American Southern, Scottish, Australian), you can say "Englishes," for example: "There is no one real standard English language; all over there world there are a variety of Englishes, that can differ in pronunciation, slang, spelling, even the definitions of words."
english plural - agenda
The plural of stimulus is stimuli.
English plural: tourist > tourists Foreign plural: touriste > touristes
Winned is not an English word so there is no English plural
The plural of syllabus is syllabi.
The English plural is symposiums. The Latin plural symposia is also used.
The plural of "English-speaking country" is "English-speaking countries."
Yes, the plural of "is" is "are" in English.
The less-used English plural is curriculums. The more widely-used Latin plural is curricula.
The Latin plural is bursae. The English plural is bursas.
English
The singular form is bacterium; the plural form is bacteria.