Curricula
The plural form of the word "curriculum" is "curricula" or sometimes "curriculums."
The word "curricula" is the plural form of the noun "curriculum." Therefore, it should take a plural verb. For example, "The curricula focus on various subjects."
The plural form for the demonstrative pronoun this is these.
The plural form of the word "baby" is "babies."
The plural form of the word "pharynx" is "pharynges."
The plural form of vow is vows.
The singular form of curriculum is "curriculum." The word does not change form between singular and plural.
The plural form of curriculum is curricula or (the Anglicized form) curriculums.
The possessive plural form of "curriculum" is "curricula's".
The word "curricula" is the plural form of the noun "curriculum." Therefore, it should take a plural verb. For example, "The curricula focus on various subjects."
They are media (the Latin plural) and mediums.The other is media, the actual Latin plural of this Latin word. The appropriate form is largely determined in context. When talking about the distribution of news or of information in general, the word media is almost always used. It would be very awkward to refer to 'news mediums' for example.- For the person (a medium) or something of medium size, the plural is mediums.- For a substance, agency, or communications form, the plural is media, and the singular may not be appropriate for some uses.
There is no plural form for the word, countries. This word itself is a plural.
The plural form of the word "inferno" is "infernos."
There is no plural word for if.
The plural form is data.
There is no 'plural form' of the word 'minute'. The word is both singular and plural.
There is no plural.
Nope - criteria is the plural for criterion. The plural for curriculum is curricula or curriculums.