Gas.
(noun) gas is singular; gases or gasses is plural
singular: gas plural: gases
The word gasoline is a noun, a thing. Gasoline is a singular, common concrete noun.
'Gas' can be both singular and plural depending on context. When referring to a substance like oxygen or carbon dioxide, it is often used as a mass noun and is considered singular. When referring to multiple types of gases or quantities of gas, it is treated as a plural noun.
Yes, and it is quite singular how this one Answer can apply equally to two equally opposite End-Points.
A noun that ends in 's' is not necessarily plural. Nouns that end in 's' require the suffix 'es' to be added to pluralize them. For example:bus (singular) > buses (plural)glass (singular) > glasses (plural)kiss (singular) > kisses (plural)gas (singular) > gases (plural)
"Gases" is the strongly preferred spelling. The plural of "gas".---Some style sheets reserve the use of the spelling "gasses" as a present singular tense of the verb "to gas" (to treat with gases). This follows the double consonant rule as in gassed and gassing.Example : "The exterminator uses toxic gases."Example : "In his job, the exterminator usually gasses the hiding vermin."
"Has" is singular, e.g. He has, she has. "Have" is plural, e.g. They have, we have. The exception is "I" - e.g. I have.
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)
The word singular is an adjective. Adjectives do not have singular or plural forms; adjectives have comparative forms: positive: singular comparative: more singular superlative: most singular
Quantum is singular, not singular possessive. The singular possessive form is quantum's.
singular