The plural form of tomato is tomatoes.
Tomato is singular, or the adjective form. The plural is tomatoes.
Yes, the noun 'tomato' is a common noun; a general word for a type of fruit (often prepared as a vegetable) that has many varieties; a word for any tomatoes of any kind.
Tomato is the singular form. Tomatoes is the plural form.
Tomato is a singular noun.
tomato
Yes, it is.
The plural of "tomato" is "tomatoes." (see the related question)
Tomatoes is a plural noun. The singular form is tomato.
Singular is tomato (no e)Plural is tomatoes (with es)
The plural of 'bunch' is bunches.The plural of 'ant' is ants.The plural of 'batch' is batches.The plural of 'day' is days.The plural of 'chimney' is chimneys.The plural of 'tomato' is tomatoes.The plural of 'umbrella' is umbrellas.The plural of 'donkey' is donkeys.The plural of 'sky' is skies.The plural of 'foot' is feet.The plural of 'show' is shows.
Bridges is the plural form of bridge.
The plural possessive form of "tomato" is "tomatoes'."
The plural form of tomato is tomatoes.
The acceptable plural form is tomatoes.
It is tomatoes.It is tomatoes.It is tomatoes.It is tomatoes.It is tomatoes.It is tomatoes.
Tomato's, as in "A tomato's coloring"
Tomato is singular and tomatoes are plural Totoma
The plural of "tomato" is "tomatoes." (see the related question)
Tomatoes is a plural noun. The singular form is tomato.
Singular possessive: tomato's (e.g. a tomato's taste)Plural possessive, more than one: tomatoes' (e.g. the tomatoes' color on the vines)
tomatoes
tomatoes
tomatoes