The plural form for the noun audio is audios.
The plural of the noun buzz (a sound) is buzzes. The slang use to mean "a rumored situation" would have no plural.
The plural form of Cameron is Camerons.
When a proper noun ends with a hard 's' sound there's no need to add anything to form the plural. "The Simons are coming to the party" is all that's required.
Thunder as a noun is a sound produced by lightning, so it normally has no plural form. Occurrences at two separate times or places would remain "thunder."
The spellings of the sound-alike terms are:rose - the flower, or past tense of riserows - plural of row, a line or arrangementroes - plural of roe deer*the word roe (fish eggs) is a homophone for row, but is already plural
"Echo" is both a singular and a plural noun. In its singular form, it refers to the repetition of sound caused by the reflection of sound waves off a surface. In its plural form, "echoes," it refers to multiple instances of sound reverberation.
Sounds or beats for music
"Speakers" is not a verb. It is a plural noun that refers to devices that produce sound.
Yes, the Y in spy has a long I sound. The plural noun spies uses the IE for the same sound.
The plural of the noun buzz (a sound) is buzzes. The slang use to mean "a rumored situation" would have no plural.
The plural form of Cameron is Camerons.
The plural is Welches. It is perfectly regular: a noun ending in a 'ch' sound forms the plural by adding 'es', as in mulch, mulches.
The plural form of rhonchus, a continuous snorelike sound in the throat or bronchial tubes, due to a partial obstruction, is rhonchi.
All words have a sound when spoken. Some words sound like the thing they refer to. An example is "splash". Such a word is called an onomatopoeia. In Latin the plural is onomatopoeiae, and this also used to be the plural in English. These days the plural is onomatopoeias.
Yes; some examples of nouns that change vowels to form the plural are:axis; axescrisis; crisesfoot; feetgoose; geeseman; menthesis; thesestooth; teethwoman; women
Yes, some irregular nouns change their vowel sound to form the plural. For example, "man" becomes "men" and "foot" becomes "feet."
The proper plural Thais (people from Thailand) is pronounced like the word "ties." The plural with the TH sound is thighs.