The plural of "mind" is "minds."
The plural of brain is brains
The plural of "therapy" is "therapies."
The plural form for the singular noun prejudice is prejudices.
The plural can be dispositions (more than one person's disposition). The term would not be plural for disposition (settlement of property) although it involved multiple items.
The plural is anxieties (e.g. He has been treated for various anxieties over the years).
The second person, personal pronoun 'you' can be singular or plural, for example:Jack, you do not mind doing the laundry.Kids, you do not mind doing the laundry.
lovelies is the only thing that comes to mind.
Yes, "thoughts" is the plural form of the noun "thought." It refers to multiple ideas or mental processes occurring in one's mind.
Mind can be a verb or noun depending on its usage: Verb: "Mind your manners." Noun: "My mind has just been blown!"
The singular possessive form is tax's.The best example that comes to mind is: The tax's bite does smart a lot.
Unfortunately, for you, my friend, there is no plural for could. To make an existing word into a plural, it must be a noun (eg. dog, desk, planet). I, myself, don' exactly understand why such a question would be asked? If you don't mind me asking, why?
Since there is broadly a lack of necessity for the plural form of consciousness, there isn't necessarily a cataloged form of it. Because of this, forms of a pluralized consciousness are often denoted in terms such as a "hive mind" or "collective consciousness".
"Deer" is a word whose plural form is the same as its singular form.
It means "they" or "them". Plural of "el". Keep in mind that this "el" refers to a person, not a thing. The plural of a thing ("el", the) is "los".
"un cheveu" (singular, plural: des cheveux) is a masculine noun in French.
The noun 'reason' is a singular noun as a word for a cause, explanation, or justification for something; an argument or premise that supports a belief or conclusion.The plural noun is 'reasons'.The noun 'reason' is an uncountable (mass) noun as a word for the ability of the mind to think, understand, or form logical conclusions; common sense; sanity.
The plural of país is países.In Portuguese, words (nouns\adjectives) ending with and a S follow the general rule of the plural of words ending with a consonant, which is by adding -es.Bear in mind that there are many irregular plural forms in Portuguese and we always should pay attention to one word's stress.For instance, nouns and adjectives ending with a S but for a word with stress on the penultimate syllable, the plural is the same form of the singular, e.g.: um lápis/cem lápis (one pencil/one hundred pencils), atlas/atlas, etc.