The plural of "injury" is "injuries." This follows the standard English rule of adding "es" to nouns that end in a consonant followed by "y." Thus, you change the "y" to "i" and add "es" to form the plural.
The plural is injuries.
The plural word for injury is injuries.
The plural of injury is injuries. As in "the victim had several injuries".
The plural of the noun scratch (a mark, or an injury) is scratches.
The plural form of the noun toe is toes.The plural possessive form is toes'.Example: His toes' injury was a result an escalator accident.
The correct spelling of the plural form of the words in parentheses is "feet" for "foot," "sheep" for "sheep," "hooves" for "hoof," and "injuries" for "injury."
It's singular. The plural form is damages.
The word injury, like many singular nouns ending in Y, forms an -ies plural, injuries.
The plural form of the noun teammate is teammates.The plural possessive form is teammates'.example: My teammates' support is essential to my performance on the field.
This looks like a version of the verb to injure (to harm). It could be:injuries (plural of noun injury) - harm suffered, or physical harminjurers (plural persons) - persons causing harminjurious (adjective) - something causing harm or damage
"This" is the singular form, as in "This injury was self-inflicted." "These" is used with a plural form. "All of these injuries were self inflicted." Note that the verb form also changes.
Neither, the noun 'dysphagia' is an uncountable (mass) noun, a word for a type of medical condition.As a subject noun, 'dysphagia' takes a verb for the singular.Example: Dysphagia is sometimes caused by a stroke or brain injury that can affect the ability to swallow.