No, not usually. "Literature" tends to be a non-countable singular noun, like such words as "information," "research" and "news." So, you would speak of the literature of England or the literature of Africa; or you can speak of British literature, or African literature. And you would use a singular verb: British literature is fascinating to study. But it would not be considered correct English to give this word a plural form.
Nouns ending in -z (as well as -s, -sh, -ch, and -x) are pluralized by adding -es to the end of the word, for example:buzz; buzzeschintz; chintzesquiz; quizzes
D. adding -s to the word
Adding apostrophe s ('s) to a word, usually makes it a "possessive": "The cat's flea." The 's after cat, indicates that the flea "belongs" to the cat. Adding s' to a word means a plural possessive: "The cats' flea." Means that there is more than one cat and they have a flea.
Maria Alaina has written: 'Measuring time' -- subject(s): Time measurements, Juvenile literature 'Adding animals' -- subject(s): Addition, Juvenile literature, Animals 'Shapes in the city' -- subject(s): Shapes, Cities and towns, Juvenile literature 'You can count' -- subject(s): Counting, Juvenile literature 'Both sides are the same' -- subject(s): Symmetry (Mathematics), Juvenile literature
Most nouns form their plural by adding "s" to the end of the word.
prince - princes - princess
To change a singular noun to plural by adding an "S," simply append the letter "S" to the end of the word. For example, "cat" becomes "cats" and "book" becomes "books."
No, but you can make it plural by adding an "s" to the end.
No, "attracts" is not a compound word. It is a single word that is formed by adding a suffix "-s" to the base word "attract."
Yes, adding S to a word while making a new word during your turn is allowed.
An irregular noun is a noun (object, thing) which isn't pluralised simply by adding an s (or -es which is also common) For instance, regular nouns are house/houses, table/tables, dish/dishes. Irregular nouns are sheep/sheep, child/children, foot/feet, formula/formulae.
Except by adding 's', such as: Spectrohelioscopes. Spectrophotometers.