It stays the same. eg, Grouse, not grouses ect,
The plural is grouse.
The plural form for the noun grouse is grouses.
Good Question, The answer is... GROUSE!
Nouns that are both singular and plural include animals such as sheep, antelope, deer, and moose, and many types of fish. Other nouns are means, offspring, series, and species.
Most plural nouns are formed by adding an 's', an 'es', or changing the last letter to 'ies'. Nouns that don't conform to this rule are called irregular nouns and use a change in spelling the word to form the plural or don't change at all to be used as plural. Some example of some irregular plural nouns are: one man to the plural men one foot to the plural feet one mouse to the plural mice one cactus to the plural cacti one goose to the plural geese one oasis to the plural oases one beau to the plural beaux one sheep to the plural sheep
Most plural nouns are formed by adding an 's', an 'es', or changing the last letter to 'ies'. Nouns that don't conform to this rule are called irregular nouns and use a change in spelling the word to form the plural or don't change at all to be used as plural. Some example of some irregular plural nouns are: one man to the plural men one foot to the plural feet one mouse to the plural mice one cactus to the plural cacti one goose to the plural geese one oasis to the plural oases one beau to the plural beaux one sheep to the plural sheep
Plural nouns are not capitalized, unless they are proper nouns.
Different is an adjective and does not change. The corresponding nouns are:difference - plural form differencesdifferentness - plural form differentnesses
Irregular nouns do not follow the typical rules of adding -s or -es to form plural forms. Irregular nouns may change their spelling completely to form their plural form. Some common irregular nouns include "child" (plural: children), "man" (plural: men), and "woman" (plural: women).
Nouns that remain the same in the singular and the plural are:bisoncattledeersheepspecies
plural nouns are nouns that tell a person place thing or idea
Yes; some examples of nouns that change vowels to form the plural are:axis; axescrisis; crisesfoot; feetgoose; geeseman; menthesis; thesestooth; teethwoman; women