You was originally plural or formal. The singular pronoun for someone you knew well was some form of "thou".
That said, you isn't really "treated as plural". It does take the same verb forms as plural nouns, probably at least partly because of its history.
As a noun, kin is treated as plural.
The plural of the noun "half" is "halves."
The plural noun is gulfs.
To change a singular possessive noun to a plural possessive noun, first you must change the noun from a singular noun to a plural noun. The reason for this is that plural nouns can take different forms which will determine how the plural possessive is formed. Examples:A plural noun that ends with the letter s, just add an apostrophe after the ending s (s').singular noun, boy; plural noun, boys; plural possessive boys'An irregular plural noun that does not end with s, add anapostrophes ('s) to the end of the word.singular noun, child; plural noun, children; plural possessive children's
The plural of the noun "address" is "addresses."
As a noun, kin is treated as plural.
Kin is treated as a plural noun
The plural form for the compound noun still life is still lifes.Note: in this compound noun, the noun 'life' is treated as a regular plural.
Yes, the noun 'mumps' is a plural, uncountable noun, a word for an infectious disease.
According to Oxford Dictionary "Government" is a noun treated as singular as well as plural.
It's an adjective. It doesn't have a plural form in English. If you use it with a noun, the noun can be plural:creative ideascreative workscreative suggestionscreative peoplecreative solutionsYou might see "creative" treated as a noun in advertising jargon, but it is not standard English.
The noun 'team' is a singular noun. The plural form is teams.
The plural of the noun "half" is "halves."
For an irregular plural like mouse -> mice, the plural is treated like a regular singular. In other words, you add the 's -> mice's.
The plural noun for path is paths. The plural noun for patch is patches.
The plural noun of general is generals. Generals is a regular plural noun.
No, Mice is a plural noun. Mouse is the singular noun.