The plural is radios.
No, the noun 'radio' is a regular noun.A regular plural is a word that forms the plural by adding an -s or an -es to the end of the word.An irregular plural is a word that forms the plural in some other way.The plural form for the noun radio is radios; the plural formed by adding an -s, a regular plural.
Radios
Oh, dude, it's "radios'." Like, you just add an apostrophe after the "s" when you want to show that multiple radios own something. So, if you're talking about the antennas on a bunch of radios, you'd say, "The radios' antennas are all tangled up." Easy peasy.
The Latin and traditional plural is antennae. (used for insect antennae, or feelers)The common English variant is antennas. (used for radio and television antennas)
just the way you spelled it: antenna. to spell it plural it is: antennae. :)
The plural of radio is radios. The plural of cockatoo is cockatoos.
No, the noun 'radio' is a regular noun.A regular plural is a word that forms the plural by adding an -s or an -es to the end of the word.An irregular plural is a word that forms the plural in some other way.The plural form for the noun radio is radios; the plural formed by adding an -s, a regular plural.
The plural form of the noun radio is radios.The plural possessive form is radios'.Example: The radios' selection had several on sale.
The plural form of the noun radio is radios.The plural possessive form is radios'.Example: The radios' selection had several on sale.
The plural of frequency is frequencies. As in "radio waves travel on different frequencies".
Radios
Oh, dude, it's "radios'." Like, you just add an apostrophe after the "s" when you want to show that multiple radios own something. So, if you're talking about the antennas on a bunch of radios, you'd say, "The radios' antennas are all tangled up." Easy peasy.
Family's. The apostrophe means that the family owns the radio. The other is the plural form of family, which would mean that there is more than one family.
A regular plural is a noun to which an -s or an -es is added to form the plural. An irregular plural is plurals formed in some other way. The plural form radios is a regular plural form.
The Latin and traditional plural is antennae. (used for insect antennae, or feelers)The common English variant is antennas. (used for radio and television antennas)
The plural of antenna is:antennae, if you're referring to the appendages of an insect;antennas, if you're referring to aerials for picking up radio/tv signals.
practitioner is singular (plural practitioners)sofa is singular (plural sofas)satellite is singular (plural satellites)clips is plural (singular clip)dentist is singular (plural dentists)dollars is plural (singular dollar)article is singular (plural articles)magazines is plural (singular magazine)laminator is singular (laminators is plural)radios is plural (singular radio)