Agenda. Although few people use the word agendum any more.
The plural of agendum is "agenda."
The foreign plural of agendum is agenda.
Yes, "agenda" is the singular form. The plural form would be "agendas."
Sure! One example is "mouse" which becomes "mice" in its plural form. Another example is "kangaroo" which becomes "kangaroos" in the plural form.
The word "agendum" is the Latin singular term for an item under consideration, and "agenda" was the plural, meaning the items being considered or plans being made. But the schedule or plan of consideration as a whole can be an agenda, with the English plural agendas. French uses a phrase "ordre du jour" (day's order) and Spanish "orden del día", and these would not normally have a plural.
When changing a plural word with the ending "a" to a singular word, you would typically remove the "a" and the word may change to a different form altogether. For example, "agenda" changes to "agendum."
Agendum is singular. Agenda or agendums is plural.
The foreign plural of agendum is agenda.
agenda.
Agenda
The singular form is agendum. The plural forms are agenda or agendums.
english plural - agenda
agenda
The word agendum has become almost extinct. Originally agenda was the plural of agendum, meaning 'a thing to be done'. However, it became applied to a list of things to be done, and in this, the most usual modern sense, agenda has become firmly singular (replacing agendum), with the plural agendas. Compare with data.
Yes, "agenda" is the singular form. The plural form would be "agendas."
An agendum is a single task which is to be achieved.
An agendum is a single task which is to be achieved.
Although agenda is the plural of agendum in Latin, in standard modern English it is a normal singular noun with a normal plural form (agendas).