Plural is more than singular.
Singular is only one and plural means more than one.
Parenthesis is singular. Parentheses is plural
No, the singular is alumna and the plural is alumnae.The other forms are the singular alumnus and the plural alumni.
NO!!! foe ; singular foes ; plural
Problem is singular, not plural. The plural form is problems.
Parentheses IS the plural form. The singular is parenthesis.
singular = one - I have one dog. plural = more than one. I have two dogs.
Singular means 1 Plural means more than 1
Singular is one thing, eg. flower Plural is more than one, eg. flowers
singular means one..plural means alot
tent=singular... if it finish with "s" is plural because means there is more that one!
Means is already plural. The singular is mean.
No, the word plural means two or more. The word singular means only one.
Singular means just 1 thing and plural mean two or more things. For example: singular-cow, plural-cows. Perhaps you are asking if the interrogative pronoun 'what' is singular or plural. The pronoun 'what' can represent a singular or plural answer so it is neither neither because the quantity is unknown when the question is asked.
Means is already plural. The singular is mean.
The terms singular and plural are two types of grammatical number used to designate a word as a word for one (singular) or for two or more (plural).Examples:I gave my mom a flower. (singular; one flower)I gave my mom a bouquet of flowers. (plural; more than one flower)The boy was eating a hot dog. (singular; one boy, one hot dog)The boys were eating hot dogs. (plural; more than one boy, more than one hot dog)
'Kiwi' is the plural and the singular (there is no 's' in Maori). 'Te kiwi' means 'the kiwi' (singular), 'Nga Kiwi' means 'the kiwi' (plural) and 'he kiwi' means 'a kiwi' or 'some kiwi'.
singular is one & plural is more than one