This could apply to several animals:
the elephant (plural elephants)
the rhinoceros (plural rhinoceroses, or just rhinos)
the pig (plural pigs)
There is none. Nouns like news are plural in form but singular in meaning, including sciences such as mathematics and physics. News always uses a singular verb.
Table salt is one product of chemistry and is used in cooking and seasoning food. Sunscreen, lotion, shampoo, and deodorant are all personal care products that are created with chemistry.
A cheetah is one that I know of.
The oxygen must reach the mitochondria in the animal cell. The mitochondria is responsible for aerobic respiration, which uses oxygen to break down sugar molecules and produce chemical energy in the form of ATP. Without oxygen, the mitochondria cannot generate energy efficiently.
The mollusk Nautilus
The plural form of use is uses.
Cow/cows. The archaic form is cow/kine.
The plural of bacterium is bacteria.
Yes. The plural form of a word or surname ending in S or SS uses the form -ES.
It may be:He uses a hammer to build a birdhouse. (uses = verb)A hammer has many uses. (uses = plural noun)
There seems to be differing opinions on the plural form for the noun gross. Half the dictionaries consulted use the singular noun form for both singular and plural (one gross, two gross), the other half uses the plural form grosses.
The plural is "they find." The odd thing about English verbs is that a third-person singular subject most often uses the S form of the verb, while a plural subject (mostly ending in S) uses the form without an S. But this does apply to irregular plurals: the child writes, the children write.
Alumnus is singular; alumni is plural. The origin of the word alumnus is Latin and uses the Latin plural form.
Uses is a noun (plural form of use) and a verb (third person singular conjugation of use).
The noun parents is the plural form of the noun parent.The noun parents' is the plural possessive form of the noun parent.Example uses of the nouns:I'm making dinner for my parents. (plural)I'll be staying at my parents' house. (plural possessive, the house of my parents)
The plural is "they find." The odd thing about English verbs is that a third-person singular subject most often uses the S form of the verb, while a plural subject (mostly ending in S) uses the form without an S. But this does apply to irregular plurals: the child writes, the children write.
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