quotas
Yes: in some parts of the word, for some things.
first you have to know the word then you have to try to make it into a def.
The word 'plural' is both an adjective and a noun. The noun plural is a word for a form of a word used to show more than one person or thing; a word or term in the plural form. Example: The plural for sheep is sheep.
The word is of Latin origin and the plural is addenda.
Quotas is the plural form of the word quota. A quota is fixed or limited number of things or people.
quotas
It's a regular plural: quota, quotas.ANS2:Since quota is a Latin adjective meaning "how many" and since it is understood to modify the feminine noun pars(part or portion) to provide the vernacular meaning in English, the plural, in Latin, would perforce need to be quotae (to agree in case, number and gender with the plural partēs).Valete.
I passed by quota before lunch.
the man gave me a quota on my gas bill
Yes, the word quota is an abstract noun; a word for an amount of something that someone has to do; an amount of something that someone is officially allowed to have or do; a word for a concept.
No, "quota" is a noun. It refers to a limited quantity of something that is officially allowed or allocated.
Every student is allocated a time quota in the computer room. He caught more than the daily quota of fish.
proportion, quotient, quota
The word crises is a plural word; it is the plural form of the word crisis.
There is no plural word for if.
a quota.