Geese, deer, moose, sheep, fish , salmon, cod
Some example nouns that are the same for singular and plural are:aircraftarchivesbinocularsbisonchalkdeerelkglassesheadquartersmoosenewsoffspringpajamaspantspolicereindeersalmonscissorsseriessheepspeciesswine
sheep. fish.
Nouns that remain the same in the singular and the plural are:bisoncattledeersheepspecies
No, interjections remain the same in both singular and plural form. They are standalone words used to convey strong emotions or feelings and do not change to indicate plurality.
Yes, some example nouns that are the same for singular and plural are:aircraftaluminumarchivesbinocularsbisonbuffalochalkconcretecorrespondencedeereducationelkfoodfurnitureglassesheadquartersknowledgemankindmoosenewsoffspringoxygenpajamaspantspolicereindeersalmonscissorsseriessheepspeciessteelswine
No, not every word ending in -us changes to -i in the plural form. Some words ending in -us change to -i (e.g. cactus -> cacti), while others may change to -es (e.g. fungus -> fungi) or remain the same in both singular and plural forms (e.g. campus -> campus).
Sperm. This is one of the words that is the same as plural as it is singular.
Examples of nouns that are the same in the singular and plural form:deerfishfurnitureoffspringpoultrysalmonsheepswinetroutyouth
this are irregular nouns Those words are called irregular nouns.
This is one of those words in English that the single and plural is the same word.
Luck is another one of those words that is the same for singular and plural.
It's spelled cacti. The plural form of cactus is like the plurals for octopus and pegasus (e.g. octopi and pegasi). These particular words are spelled in exactly the same way as their Latin root words would be, so the us is changed to i.