Fruit can work as a 'non-count' noun: "We ate fruit for dessert." In this case it is understood that you all ate different pieces of fruit.
If you want to emphasize variety, you can make it plural by adding 's'. "There were many fruits on the breakfast bar." This would be understood to mean that there were more than one sort of fruit laid out.
"There was fruit on the breakfast bar." would indicate that there was at least one sort of fruit and you could infer that the diversity was not notable.
The plural form for the noun grapefruit is grapefruits.Unlike the noun the uncountable noun 'fruit', a type of food, the fruit 'grapefruit' is a thing that can be counted.
As a noun meaning the edible part of a plant, "fruit" is singular. For example "edible fruit". The plural would be "fruits" when speaking of several kinds of fruit. (notice the 's' on kinds means no 's' on fruit).
"Eat some fruit." is correct English. Fruit is both singular and plural. "Fruit" is always treated as a singular noun and used in the singular and is never plural.
As you are using the plural, that means you are talking about the fruit so here it is a plural noun. If you use 'orange' in the singular that could mean the fruit or the colour of the fruit. In the second case it would be an adjective.
Yes, the noun 'bananas' is a common noun, the plural form of the singular noun 'banana'; a general word for a type of tropical fruit.
The likely word is the plural noun "bananas" (yellow fruit). The similar plural is "banners" (emblems, flags, or headings).
Yes, the word 'berries' is the plural form for the singular noun 'berry', a word for a type of fruit, a word for a thing.
The plural noun is halves.
The plural noun 'strawberries' is a common noun, a general word for a type of fruit. A common noun is capitalized only when it is the first word in a sentence.
The noun 'orange' is a singular noun, a word for one piece of fruit, a word for one color. The plural noun is oranges.Examples:Mom put an orange in my lunch box. (singular)The pumpkins were a nice shade of orange. (singular, one shade)I took a photo of the bowl of oranges. (plural)
The noun 'fruit' as a word for a food substance is an uncountable noun.The plural form 'fruits' is used exclusively for 'types of' or 'kinds of'; for example:The fruits needed for this recipe are cherries and blueberries.
The plural noun for path is paths. The plural noun for patch is patches.