The plural of life is lives.
No.
Fawns is the proper plural form of fawn. Although a fawn is a baby deer, the plural of deer is deer --no s at the end. So, a dozen fawns are a lot of deer (not deers).
Some examples of plural nouns that are spelled the same as singular nouns are: deer, sheep, fish, and moose.
Deer, sheep, moose, salmon, and trout are both plural and singular nouns.
It can be and often is both. There is no such word in the English language as "deers," rather more than one deer is still called deer, just like a group of moose is moose or a group of elk is elk.
Describing words are adjectives; sheep, deer, and moose are nouns. Other animals that are the spelled the same for singular or plural are: salmon, trout, and swine.
It can be and often is both. There is no such word in the English language as "deers," rather more than one deer is still called deer, just like a group of moose is moose or a group of elk is elk.
Nouns that are both singular and plural include animals such as sheep, antelope, deer, and moose, and many types of fish. Other nouns are means, offspring, series, and species.
The moose simply took over the pond, chasing away the smaller deer in the area. Those moose got into the garden again, last night!
Moose, just like for a group of deer or fish you dont need to add an s at the end.
Geese, deer, moose, sheep, fish , salmon, cod
A moose is a very large deer like mammal and the males have massive antlers. The life span of a moose is around 20 years.