No, you cannot put 's' to make 'effort' into plural form. Effort remains effort either it is one ore more effort.
"Effort" is a noun, e.g. He made an effort on his exam.
Effort is mostly used as a noun. However, the past tense of the verb form would be efforted.
The word effort is a noun. The plural form is efforts.
An 'object noun' is a noun that functions as the object of a verb or a preposition.Examples:The dog ate my homework. (the noun 'homework is the direct object of the verb 'ate')I gave the teacher flowers. (the noun 'teacher' is the indirect object of the verb 'gave'; the direct object is the noun 'flowers')The teacher gave me an A for effort. (the noun 'effort' is the object of the preposition 'for')
In French, the word "effort" is masculine. It is used with masculine articles and pronouns, such as "l'effort" (the effort) or "mon effort" (my effort).
There are 2 adjectives.The adjective long modifies the noun distances.The adjective little modifies the noun effort.
attempt IS a noun
The noun 'struggle' is a singular, common, abstract noun; a word for a violent or strenuous effort or exertion.
The word 'try' is an abstract noun, a word for an effort, an attempt. Another abstract noun form is the gerund 'trying'.
Both. You must try harder. (verb) I got it right after my second try. (noun)
The noun 'work' is an abstract noun as a word for:physical or mental effort exerted to do or make something, labor, toil.employment at a job or in a position to make a living, occupation, trade.an effect produced by natural forcesThe noun 'work' is a concrete noun as a word for: the place where someone is employed.something one has made or done (a work of Picasso).
The abstract noun of "diligent" is "diligence." It refers to the quality of being careful and persistent in work or effort. Diligence embodies the idea of consistent and dedicated effort towards achieving a goal.