Only the month of May (a noun) can form a plural, and the plural of a month is formed by adding S (e.g. For the last few Mays, he has visited the village to observe the holiday). For January and February, an -ies form also may be used.
Yes, dishes is the plural form of the singular noun dish.
The plural form for the compound noun passer-by is passers-by.
The plural of yeast may be either yeast or yeasts.
The plural of ostrich may be ostrich(unspecified group) or ostriches.
There seems to be differing opinions on the plural form for the noun gross. Half the dictionaries consulted use the singular noun form for both singular and plural (one gross, two gross), the other half uses the plural form grosses.
Had may be singular or plural. --- No! We use had if the noun is singular and we use have if the noun is plural! TY!ural.
The plural form of use is uses.
Yes, dishes is the plural form of the singular noun dish.
We use is in singular form and are in plural form.
Mga buraot may practice tayo
"Japanese" is an adjective, and so it has no plural form. While some national adjectives may be used as nouns having a plural form - we may say Germans and Italians and Bengalis, for example - national adjectives in -ese are not among them. Use the periphrastic, originally French possessive form: of the Japanese.
"Politics" is already plural in form, though it may take a singular verb.
The plural form of understanding is understandings. But this would have very little use since the common use (to mean comprehension) is uncountable. Compare this to the much greater use of the plural "misunderstandings."
The plural form for the compound noun passer-by is passers-by.
The plural of yeast may be either yeast or yeasts.
attendees
The plural form of female donkeys is jennies.