You make a sentence in Spanish the same way you do in English;
1) Start with a capital letter.
2) Have a subject.
3) Have a predicate.
4) End with at least a period or some other suitable punctuation.
Despite all the requirements, a Spanish sentence can be one word long. The word, "Voy." means "I go." or "I am going." The "I" (the subject) is understood in the conjugation of the verb. It meets all the requirements above.
The plural of the Spanish word "lección" is "lecciones."
The Spanish word for "number" is "número." You would have to make it plural to mean numbers, so you would say "números."
In Spanish, sixth is sexto (singular, masculine). If you wish to make in singular and plural, use sexta. To make either form plural, simply add an s at the end.
Portals is the plural of portal
there is no plural words in tagalog. if you want to make a word plural you just add "mga" before the word. for example: Mansanas is the word for Apple. if I what to say Apples you simply say "mga mansanas".
The plural form of the word apellido is "apellidos" in Spanish.
The plural word for "un diario" in Spanish is "unos diarios."
Pescados.
Iglúes.
The word 'momento' is not an English word, it means 'moment' (which is English) in Spanish, Italian and Portuguese
Most adjectives in the English language, including necessary, do not have a separate plural form. The plural of 'is necessary' is 'are necessary'. This differs from languages like Spanish, in which you make an adjective plural when you make the word it modifies plural. For example, in English the plural of 'white cat' is 'white cats', whereas in Spanish the plural of 'gato blanco' is 'gatos blancos'.
The plural form of "serio" is "serios" in Spanish.