Abstract nouns may not have plurals, as a rule, because there cannot be more than the single concept, such as amazement, honesty, and pessimism. Those that do have plurals are referring to examples of the concept (fears, beliefs, charities) not the concept itself.
i can be addendum the plural for it is addenda
singular form = ox, plural = oxen singular form = man, plural = men single = child, plural = children single = woman, plural = women
Some example nouns that are the same for singular and plural are:aircraftarchivesbinocularsbisonchalkdeerelkglassesheadquartersmoosenewsoffspringpajamaspantspolicereindeersalmonscissorsseriessheepspeciesswine
There is no plural form. Do and Do not are verbs
The plural of lunch is "lunches" No words form the plural lunch as it isn't a plural itself
Some nouns that are the same for the singular and the plural are:deerfishelksheepoffspringSome nouns are singular but appear to be plural; words that are a short form for 'a pair of...'. There is no plural for these nouns, the plurals are expressed by using 'pairs of...'. Some examples are:pantsshortsglassesscissorsbinocularsUncountable nouns have no plural form and take a verb for the singular. Some uncountable nouns are:moneyinformationnewsadviceelectricity
No, not all words have a distinct plural possessive form. Some singular possessive forms can be used to indicate possession for both singular and plural nouns. For example, "children's" can be used for the plural possessive of "child" and "children."
plural: pianosMost words ending with an 'o' usually take '-es' to form the plural, but some words take '-s', e.g. pianos, radios, videos, etc.
There is no plural form, not all words can be plural, and thus ends up being 'and'.
Some words ending in o that form their plural by adding s only include: pianos, duos, solos, tacos.
Examples of nouns that are the same in the singular and the plural:sheepdeergrouseChineseSwissLebaneseoffspringknowledgebarracksinformationbutterswine
Nouns that are always plural with no singular form are:newsmathematicsclothes