the plural for quay is quay's :D
No, the plural for quay is quays - no apostrophe. An apostrophe indicates either a possessive or a contraction - not a plural.
This applies even for words that end in a vowel (eg the plural of bee is bees, not bee's) and for abbreviations (eg the plural od DVD is DVDs, not DVD's).
Don't use apostrophes in plurals!
The plural of quay is quays.
Key and cay are the homophones for quay
Quay, pronounced Key is a monosyllabic word. Only one syllable.
An antonym for "quay" could be "land." A quay is a structure built along the shore for ships to dock, whereas land refers to the solid ground.
A homophone for "key" is "quay." The word "quay" refers to a structure built along the shore or a riverbank that is used for loading and unloading boats or ships.
"Quay" functions as a noun and is used to refer to a structure built parallel to the shoreline for docking ships or loading and unloading cargo.
Stephen Quay goes by Brothers Quay.
Timothy Quay goes by Brothers Quay.
Key and cay are the homophones for quay
Dave Quay's birth name is David Maxwell Dunn Quay.
The country of "Quay" does not exist.
there 1 syllable in quay
A group of new ships was standing in a quay
Red Quay was created in 1958.
The population of Connah's Quay is 17,500.
New Quay's population is 1,200.
Gyles' Quay was created in 1780.
a quay