The plural form could be Fs.
Hmm.. i suppose its either "F" or "F's".
Most nouns that end with 'f' or 'fe' are made plural by dropping the 'f' or 'fe' and adding 'ves'. The plural for thief is thieves (not thiefs).
Actually, when a noun ends with an F, we generally change it to a VES for the plural. So, calf becomes calves. The word elf becomes elves. Thus, bookshelf in the singular would NOT end with an F in the plural. It would become bookshelves.
In American English, it is extremely rare for a plural word to end in a letter outside of "S".
Nouns that end with 'f' or 'fe' are made plural by dropping the 'f' or the 'fe' and adding 'ves'. The plural for sheaf is sheaves.
The plural of knife is knives. The F becomes a V when forming the plural, as in life-lives, half-halves, or leaf-leaves.
The usual plural form for words ending in -f or -ef is to drop the f and add ves. There are exceptions to this rule where only an s is added to the end of the words.
The rule for forming the plural of the noun 'elf' is to change the ending 'f' to a 'v' and add 'es'. The plural noun is elves.
The plural of football is footballs.
ItalianAdjectiverinomato m (f rinomata, m pluralrinomati, f plural rinomate) renowned, famous, well-knowncelebrity (attributive)Verbrinomato m (f rinomata, m pluralrinomati, f plural rinomate) Past participle of rinomare
Plural of FlyerIn English, the spellings of flyer and flier are acceptable, with f-l-i-e-r being preferred. The plural of flier is fliers. The plural of flyer is flyers.
The rule for making nouns ending an 'f' sound into the plural from is to drop off the 'f' and add 'ves'. Some examples are:calf - calvesknife - kniveslife - livessheaf - sheaveswife - wiveswolf - wolves