Yes, there is a plural form for the word communication that can be used correctly; examples:
Communications with the home office are temporarily out of order.
We've received a number of communications from the Smiths on their world cruise.
The plural form of the word signal is signals.
The singular noun 'communication' is an uncountable noun as a word for the imparting or exchanging of information or news; conveying or sharing of ideas and feelings: a word for a concept.The noun 'communications' is the plural form of the count noun 'communication' as a word for the means of sending or receiving information, such as telephone, television, computers; a message such as a letter, phone call, or email.
The word 'communication' is a noun, a singular, common, abstract noun; a word for the exchange of information, a thing.
The common abbreviation for the word "communication" is "comm." This abbreviation is often used in academic and professional contexts, particularly in fields related to communication studies.
The word messenger's is the possessive form for the noun messenger, for example the messenger's bicycle. The plural possessive form is messengers'.
The word prolix is used solely as an adjective, and as such does not have a plural form.
When used as a noun, the plural of hunt is hunts.When used as a verb, the word 'hunts' is present tense, not a plural. Verbs do not have a plural form.
The word Africans is the plural form. The singular form is African. Some nouns in their plural form can be used to refer to an entire group, like the word Africans. But it is still a plural word.
The word 'memoranda' is the plural form of the noun 'memorandum', a word for an informal record or communication; a word for a thing.
Yes. The plural form is languages.
The plural form of the noun 'tune' is tunes.When used as a verb, the word 'tunes' is present tense, not a plural. Verbs do not have a plural form.
The word "tidings" is plural. Although it can also be used in its singular form as "tiding", it is most often used in its plural form.
The word very is an adverb or an adjective, depending on how it is used in a sentence. There is no plural form.
The plural form for the demonstrative pronoun this is these.
It depends on the context. Typically the noun you used to describe living would be plural instead of the word living. Living has no plural form.
The word 'criteria' is the plural form of the singular word 'criterion'. 'Those are the criteria that I used in making my decision.' 'That is the criterion that I used in making my decision.' It is wrong to use the word 'criteria' as a singular. Similarly, it is wrong to use 'phenomena' as a singular. It is the plural form of the singular word 'phenomenon'.
There is no plural form for the pronoun 'there', a word that introduces a statement by taking the place of a noun for a specific place or circumstance (as used to introduce this sentence).The word 'there' has no plural form as an adverb: The bus stops there.The word 'there' has no plural form as an interjection: There! That didn't take long.