The plural form of the word "Portuguese" is "Portuguese." It remains the same in both singular and plural forms.
The old Portuguese currency was called the Portuguese real.
Portuguese (and Spanish): apparently a plural form of Faria
I am not sure what you mean by plural word. In Portuguese as in English we form the plural of a word just putting a ''s'' in the end of word. Example: maça(apple), maças(apples). Or carro(car) and carros(cars). Some words need "es" though.If you are just asking how to say Plural in Portuguese you be glad to know that it is "plural" like in English.Is worth knowing that in English we can't say "Portugueses" just Portuguese people but in Portuguese we say: "Português" (the language or a portuguese person and "Portugueses" (the portuguese people or a group the portuguese people"
The proper noun Portuguese is an uncountable (mass) noun, as a word for a person of Portugal or the people of Portugal; and a word for the language of Portugal.The possessive form of the noun Portuguese is Portuguese's.
The equivalent of 'the' in Portuguese is 'o' (masculine) or 'a' (feminine), depending on the gender of the noun. In plural form, it is 'os' (masculine) or 'as' (feminine).
The plural of Portuguese is Portuguese people or Portuguese speakers.
"Rei" is a Portuguese equivalent of "king."The Portuguese word is a masculine noun. Its singular definite article is "o" ("the"). Its singular indefinite article is "um" ("a, one").The pronunciation is "hey" according to the continental accent of Portugal and the carioca accent of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
In English : Portuguese In Portuguese : Português (single) Portugueses (plural)
Joy is the English equivalent of 'gozo'. The Portuguese word is a masculine gender noun in the singular. The plural form is 'gozos'.
"The kings" is an English equivalent of "os reis."The masculine plural definite article "os" means "the." The plural form of the masculine noun "reis" means "kings." The plural indefinite article is "uns" ("some").The pronunciation is "oosh-hehsh" according to the continental accent and the carioca Portuguese of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
homem, plural homens