The plural of blouse is blouses.
T-shirt, middy, shell, V-neck
Bridges is the plural form of bridge.
"Beliefs" does not have a plural form, as it is already plural. Beliefs is the plural form of belief.
There is no plural form for the word, countries. This word itself is a plural.
The plural of "she" is "they", so the plural of "she had" is "they had".
There is no plural form of pupae. Pupae is the plural form of pupa.
Bridges is the plural form of bridge.
"Beliefs" does not have a plural form, as it is already plural. Beliefs is the plural form of belief.
There is no plural form for the word, countries. This word itself is a plural.
"Groceries" is the plural form of "grocery."
The plural form of "meter" is "meters."
It has no plural form.
The plural form for the noun sergeant is sergeants; the plural possessive form is sergeants'.
The plural form of rung is rungs.
The plural form of mouth is mouths. The plural form of month is months. The Mounth is a range of hills in Scotland and does not have a plural form.
Words like scissors or pants are examples of words with a plural form but a singular meaning. The verbs that go with them agree with their plural form, not with the meaning (which is singular): These scissors need sharpening. (not "This scissors needs sharpening.") These pants go well with my yellow blouse. (not "This pants goes well with my yellow blouse.") But this is an aspect of English which is slowly changing. These days you will often hear 'This scissors needs sharpening' - and sometimes even see it written. A teacher will still mark it wrong though.
The plural of "she" is "they", so the plural of "she had" is "they had".
The plural form is founders. The plural possessive is founders'.