Mots
The plural form of the French noun 'chaise' is 'chaises'.
The noun 'French' is an uncountable (mass) noun as a word for the language of France or the people of France as a whole.The word 'French' is also an adjective.
"Dollars" is a French equivalent of "dollars."Specifically, the French noun is an English loan word. Its definite plural article is "les" ("the"). Its indefinite plural is "des" ("some").This masculine noun is pronounced the same in the singular and the plural: "doh-lahr."
'un stylo' is a masculine, noun in French. 'stylos' with the additional 's' is a plural noun, but still masculine.
The word 'words' is a plural, common, noun.
There are three different words for "the": use le for a singular masculine noun, la for a singular feminine noun, or les for a plural noun of either gender.
The plural of the French noun dico is dicos(slang for dictionaries, dictionnaires).
The noun maquis is already a plural. The noun maqui refers to a small shrub, plural maquis. The proper noun Maqui refers to French Resistance guerrillas of World War II, plural Maquis.
The French word for doodle is "gribouillage" (masculine noun). The plural is "gribouillages" (same with the additional "s")
The noun country is pays in French (plural also pays).
The words was and were are not singular or plural, BUT... WAS is used after a singular noun, and WERE is used after a plural noun. Examples: The dog (a singular noun) WAS walking in the park today. The dogs (a plural noun) WERE walking in the park today. A helpful saying to remember; He WAS, they WERE.
The noun 'lava' is an uncountable noun (or mass noun) as a word for a substance.The plural form of uncountable nouns for substances are words for 'types of' or 'kinds of'.