The plural of race is races.
As in "he races to her aid".
races
The plural is a normal S plural, races.
just add S to race for the plural form "races" is the plural for race
Races is the plural form for the singular noun race.
The word "people" is a plural noun, not directly from the word person. When using "people" to mean a race or cultural group, the plural is peoples.
A sulky. (plural)- Sulkies.
Elf or in plural form the Elves.
Not as a plural of a singular noun. Once it is plural, it is already a multiple.However, group nouns that can use a singular verb form can be made plural to indicate more than one group or instance, such as family-families and staff-staffs.ALSO, a few plural nouns have homonyms that are singular, and these can be made plural.One example is people, which is a plural noun, but also has a singular meaning as "a race of individuals" which can be pluralized as peoples.
The French word "course" means "race" in English. When used in the plural (les courses), it means the shopping.
The word 'fellowmen' is a plural, common, abstract noun; a word for other members of the human race.
The present progressive form of racing conjugated in first, second, and third person (singular and plural): I am racing We are racing You are racing He/she/it is racing They are racing
The 20th century.
The plural of run-off, meaning 1: a final race, contest, or election to decide an earlier one that has not resulted in a decision in favor of any one competitor. 2: the portion of precipitation on land that ultimately reaches streams often with dissolved or suspended material, the plural is run-offs.