The plural form of "phenomena" is "phenomenas".
Phenomena is a plural noun. The singular form is phenomenon. There is some tendency to use phenomena as a singular noun, but it is not actually a legitimate form.
phenomena
phenomena
"Phenomena" is plural, with "phenomenon" being the singular form.
The plural of phenomenon is phenomena.
The plural form of the noun phenomenon is phenomena.The plural possessive form is phenomena's.Example: These phenomena's occurrences are very rare.
The plural of phenomenon is phenomena.Phenomena is the usual plural of phenomenon. Phenomenons can sometimes be used as well in nonscientific writing when the meaning is "extraordinary things, occurrences, or persons".
plural word is phenomena singular is phenomenon
The word 'phenom' is a slang or informal form for the noun, short for phenomenon (the plural for is phenomena, an irregular plural).Since the use of the word 'phenom' is relatively modern, the plural form can be a regular plural: phenoms.
Yes, although in American English the plural form of "phenomenon" tends to be "phenomena" rather than "phenomenons".
No, it is not. The word phenomenon is a singular noun, and the plural is phenomena. The adjective form is "phenomenal" (extraordinary or exceptional).
Phenomenon is singular and phenomena is plural