According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the plural of research can be research or researches.
The noun 'research' is singular; there is no plural form. Multiples are expressed in units describing the research, such as a body of research, works of research, or results of research. The word 'research' is also a verb (research, researches, researching, researched) and is sometimes used as an adjective, such as research student, research funding, etc.
No, the noun 'research' is a non-count noun, a type of aggregate noun, a word representing an indefinite number of elements or parts. The noun 'research' has no plural form.The word 'research' is also a verb: research, researches, researching, researched.
The plural of cargo is cargoes.
I am not an English tchr but I tk it is more than one of a place person or thing. So. instead of fishes, it is fish it can be used singularly or as plural - more than one. I am not sure so I am going to do more research.
The plural of "she" is "they", so the plural of "she had" is "they had".
Research cannot be in the plural because it is an uncountable noun.
The plural is operatories. (medical, surgical, or research areas)
The noun 'research' is singular; there is no plural form. Multiples are expressed in units describing the research, such as a body of research, works of research, or results of research. The word 'research' is also a verb (research, researches, researching, researched) and is sometimes used as an adjective, such as research student, research funding, etc.
No, the noun 'research' is a non-count noun, a type of aggregate noun, a word representing an indefinite number of elements or parts. The noun 'research' has no plural form.The word 'research' is also a verb: research, researches, researching, researched.
The noun research is an uncountable noun, a word for the systematic investigation into and study of materials and sources in order to establish facts and reach new conclusions. The noun research is a word for a concept, expressed as some research, a lot of research, a little research, etc. The word research is also a verb: research, researches, researching, researched.
no . . . . . . plural for scientist is scientists.
There are two accepted plural forms of the noun 'appendix', appendixes and appendices.The plural possessive forms are appendixes' and appendices'.Example: The appendixes' resources in these texts will help with your research.
No. R&D is the abbreviation for "Research and Development" (not either plural).
"Researchers" is not a verb; it is a plural noun referring to people who conduct research.
Th noun 'research' is a singular noun, which takes a singular verb. The word research is also a verb.
The plural of cargo is cargoes.
The possessive form of the plural noun babysitters is babysitters'.Example: We research all of the babysitters' backgrounds.