The plural form of "you" is "you" as well. English does not distinguish between singular and plural forms for the word "you."
No. Got is the past tense of get, not a noun. And gots is not an English word.
No. It is singular. The Latin-form plural is "cortices" but the English plural "cortexes" is also used.
The plural form for the demonstrative pronoun this is these.
--> In the English language adjectives do NOT have a plural form. Therefore, you can say: "The kid is safe. The kids are safe."The verb changes, but the adjective does not.
The plural form of "you" is "you" as well. English does not distinguish between singular and plural forms for the word "you."
The English plural adds the usual "s" as "barnyards".
There's no such word as 'facillus' in English
Not in English
No. Got is the past tense of get, not a noun. And gots is not an English word.
No. It is singular. The Latin-form plural is "cortices" but the English plural "cortexes" is also used.
The plural of the word larva is the Latin plural larvae.The English plural "larvas" is less commonly used.
In English, "venuses".In Latin, which is the word's language of origin, the plural is veneres.
lindos is the masculine and plural form of the word for pretty
plural form of plates: plaques singular: plaque
Panini is the plural; panino is the singular. However, it is common to hear "panini" used as the singular form, and even to hear "paninis" as the plural. The confusion arises because panino is an Italian word, and it does not follow the English rules for forming plurals.
questions, with an "s", just as in English