The plural of organ is organs.
The plural is calyces or calyxes.
Bronchi is the plural of bronchus.
The plural of bacterium is bacteria.
The plural of tissue is tissues.
The plural of illness is illnesses.
Measles is the plural form of the disease measles.
Yes, the noun 'mumps' is a plural, uncountable noun, a word for an infectious disease.
Dysphagia (difficulty or discomfort in swallowing, as a symptom of disease) has no plural form.
The Latin suffix for inflammation is -itis
Measles refers to a viral disease and, while the word is plural in structure, it is singular in meaning.
The word is spelled disease (singular); or diseases (plural). The base word is "ease" with a prefix of "dis-" to make "disease".
Yes of course it can . Bacterium is the plural of bacteria so yes it can cause disease but since bacteria reproduce lightening fast it wouldn't stay a bacterium for long
of Linger, Delaying., Drawn out in time; remaining long; protracted; as, a lingering disease.
The word 'illness' is a noun, a singular, common, abstract noun; a word for a disease or period of sickness affecting the body or mind.The plural form for the noun illness is illnesses.
The noun measles, a word for a viral disease, is plural in structure but singular in meaning. The noun measles is an uncountable (mass) noun.The word "measles" is plural when referring to the spots on the body and singular when you have measles as a disease. So you may have to say "cases of measles" to pluralize multiple episodes of the illness.For example, "His measles were bothering him." or "We cannot handle all the measles cases." It seems you have to throw in an extra word to differentiate between the spots and the outbreaks. Do you have an example sentence?Although measles is a plural noun, it is treated as singular.
That is the correct spelling of "anybody" (anyone).