That would be "Hoses".
Fire-fighter's hoses is the plural of fire-fighter's hose
The plural form for the noun 'material' is materials.
Tool is singular. Tools is plural.
Pumps.
No, the word infrastructure is a singular noun. The plural noun is infrastructures.
It depends on the meaning. When referring to a flexible pipe for conveying water or other liquids, the plural is hoses.When referring to the old-fashioned word meaning leg-covering, the plural is hose(archaic hosen). This sense is still used in some American English terms such as panty-hose (derived from German Hose)
Fire-fighter's hoses is the plural of fire-fighter's hose
The homophone of hose is "hoes," as in the plural of the word "hoe" - a garden implement used for weeding and breaking up soil.
The word crises is a plural word; it is the plural form of the word crisis.
There is no plural word for if.
The plural word for delay is delays.
A non-plural word, a word (noun or pronoun) that is not plural is singular, a word for just one.
the plural word is comedones
No it's a singular word. A plural word would be "have".
In Chinese, the plural form of the word "minute" is "分钟" (fēnzhōng).
There is no plural form for the word, countries. This word itself is a plural.
"A" hose in Tudor times is a misnomer. Nowadays, a hose is, as you know, a long tube. However, in Tudor times "hose" was a plural word and meant "a pair of trousers", as in "doublet and hose" - the original version of "jacket and trousers". Etymologically (in their origins) the words are related. When you come to think about it, a pair of trousers is nothing but a pair of tubes stitched together.