Neither, the noun 'dysphagia' is an uncountable (mass) noun, a word for a type of medical condition.
As a subject noun, 'dysphagia' takes a verb for the singular.
Example: Dysphagia is sometimes caused by a stroke or brain injury that can affect the ability to swallow.
The medical term "dysphagia" (trouble swallowing) is a noun, but it is not singular or plural.
"Dysphagia" is the name of a medical condition (trouble swallowing), and is singular.
The medical term dysphagia means trouble swallowing, and is neither singular or plural.
No. The medical term dysphagia means trouble swallowing. It is not singular or plural.
Dysphagia (difficulty or discomfort in swallowing, as a symptom of disease) has no plural form.
Singular: book / Plural: books Singular: cat / Plural: cats Singular: child / Plural: children Singular: foot / Plural: feet
what are the greek words end by 'on' in singular and change to 'a' in plural?
Plural
practitioner is singular (plural practitioners)sofa is singular (plural sofas)satellite is singular (plural satellites)clips is plural (singular clip)dentist is singular (plural dentists)dollars is plural (singular dollar)article is singular (plural articles)magazines is plural (singular magazine)laminator is singular (laminators is plural)radios is plural (singular radio)
Nouns that are always plural with no singular form are:newsmathematicsclothes
Both are singular nouns.
plural word is phenomena singular is phenomenon