The plural of element is elements.
As in "our planet has many elements".
The noun oxygen is an uncountable noun, a word for a substance, an element. Oxygen has no plural form.
The word element is a noun. The plural form is elements.
That is the correct spelling of the plural noun "elements."
Spectra is the plural of spectrum. You could discuss the spectrum generated by an element in a star, and comparing more than one element, you would be comparing spectra. (Latin -um words form plurals like this, so you cannot refer to them as spectrums. Another example is datum, singular, and data, plural.)
The noun copper is an element. The adjective form means made of copper, or copper-colored.The noun "copper" meaning a copper coin (or slang for a policeman) would have the plural coppers.
In English, the plural ending is typically added to the second element of a compound word. For example, in the compound word "catsuit," "cats" is the plural form of "cat," while "suit" remains singular. This convention applies to most compound nouns, where the focus is on the primary concept represented by the second element.
There is an improper plural "bariums" (barium being an element). Otherwise the longest words are umbras and rumbas.
In chemistry, an element is a substance which is not a combination of any other substances, either physically or chemically. On your stove, or in your oven, the element is the part that gets hot. When plural, as "elements" it also means basics or fundamental principles.
Xylem (the vascular tissue in plants which conducts water and dissolved nutrients upwards from the root and also helps to form the woody element in the stem) is a mass noun, the plural form of which is xylems.Phloem (the vascular tissue in plants which conducts sugars and other metabolic products downwards from the leaves) is a mass noun, the plural form of which is phloems.
A matrix (plural matrices, or less commonly matrixes) is a rectangular array of numbers, such as an item in a matrix is called an entry or an element.
No, "women" is not a preposition. It is a plural noun referring to adult female humans. Prepositions are words that show the relationship between a noun or pronoun and another element in the sentence.
The element name is "aluminium" outside the US, where it is aluminum.