Depending on context, the plural of beef is beef, beeves or beefs.
beef (mass noun)
Meaning: the flesh of a cow, bull, or ox, used as food.
beeves (US beefs) (count noun),
Meaning: cows, bulls, or oxen fattened for their meat, i.e.
The farmer brought 20 beeves to market
beefs (count noun)
Meaning: grievances, complaints
Poor education was just one of his beefs.
Meat. Uncountable nouns cannot be counted normally and have no plural form: e.g.milk sugar soap meat.
Beef, there is no plural. You can say I have one beef cow or I have 100 beef cattle.
Meat or meats can both be the plural of "meat"
Beef or beeves.
meats
The word pheasants is the plural form of the noun pheasant.
caro, genitive singular carnisnominative ("Meat fell") : "caro" (no 'n') / plural "carnes"genitive ("belonging to the meat") : "carnis" / plural "carnum"dative ("at the meat") : "carni" / plural "carnus"accusative ("I ate the meat") : "carnem" / plural "carnes"ablative ("from the meat") : "carne" / plural "carnibus"locative ("where the meat is") : "carni" or "carne" / plural "carnibus"vocative ("Meat, what are you doing in the soup?") : "caro" / plural "carnes"You might notice that some of the forms are identical. For example, "carni" is used for the dative singular, and could be used for the locative singular (though these cases have different plurals).
The word meat is a noun. The plural is meats.
The noun 'meat' is an uncountable (mass) noun, a word for something that is indivisible into countable units.The plural noun 'meats' is a shortened form of 'kinds of' or 'types of' meat.Units of uncountable nouns are expressed by adjectives or a partitive noun (also called a noun counter).The noun 'meat' takes a verb for singular unless quantified in the plural; for example:The meat is fresh at this market.Gray meat is not fresh. (expressed by the adjective 'gray')This piece of meat is fresh. (expressed by the singular partitive noun 'piece')Both pieces of meat are fresh. (expressed by the plural partitive noun 'pieces')The meats are priced per pound. (the kinds of meat)
The word crises is a plural word; it is the plural form of the word crisis.
The noun 'meat' as a word for a substance is an mass noun.The plural noun 'meats' is reserved for 'types of' or 'kinds of', for example, a selection of meats or a mixture of meats.
The noun 'meat' as a word for a substance is an uncountable (mass) noun.The plural noun 'meats' is reserved for 'types of' or 'kinds of', for example, a selection of meats or a mixture of meats.
There is no plural word for if.
The plural word for delay is delays.
A non-plural word, a word (noun or pronoun) that is not plural is singular, a word for just one.
the plural word is comedones
No it's a singular word. A plural word would be "have".