Assuming you are are referring to burtuqal (برتقال) - meaning orange (the fruit)...
There is no set plural, so it depends on the country. The most common plural form is just to use burtuqal (برتقال) with no changes. There is also burtuqala (برتقالة) and burtuqalaat (برتقالات).
araanib
The Arabic for 'girl' is Bin'nt. The plural is Binat. Bin'nt is used in conversational Arabic to refer to daughter.
you (singular) = anta أنتyou (plural) = antom أنتم
Sukkuk is an Arabic word and plural of a word Sakk. It signifies legal instrument deed or cheque.
صحراء ṣaḥrā' (with the plural صحار ṣaḥār, if you study Arabic, the singular is diptote and the plural is defective). It's where the name "Sahara" for the Sahara desert in northern Africa comes from.
Ayah? Is that a french word or Arabic word? Ayah means prayer (piece/part) in Arabic, the plural would be "Ayat" But if it's french, sorry i can't help >.>
نافذه Na.fe.tha and in plural : نوافذ Na.wa.feth ( "th" here is pronounced as in the word "than" )
Ellohim is the plural of esteem of the word Elloh, which is the Hebrew word meaning God, just like the Arabic word Allah meaning God too.
The plural of suq, an Arabic street market, is suqs.
"Student" in Arabic is: taleb (male) /tɑ:ləb/ طالب taleba (female) /tɑ:ləbə/ طالبة The root word is "talab" which means one who seeks, in this case, seeks knowledge. The extremists in Afghanistan/Pakistan were seminary students and call themselves "Taliban", although in Arabic the word is "Tullab" for students (plural).
The Arabic word for 'cars' is saiarat and the Arabic spelling is سيارات.
Translation: Qadhi (قاضي) Arabic Grammar note: The Yah at the end drops off in the plural masculine (Qadhun) and becomes Tanwin Al-Kasr in the Marfu'a or Majrur Case if indefinite (Qadhin).