The plural form for the noun audio is audios.
Sounds.
The plural of the noun buzz (a sound) is buzzes. The slang use to mean "a rumored situation" would have no plural.
The plural form of Cameron is Camerons.
When a proper noun ends with a hard 's' sound there's no need to add anything to form the plural. "The Simons are coming to the party" is all that's required.
Thunder as a noun is a sound produced by lightning, so it normally has no plural form. Occurrences at two separate times or places would remain "thunder."
The spellings of the sound-alike terms are:rose - the flower, or past tense of riserows - plural of row, a line or arrangementroes - plural of roe deer*the word roe (fish eggs) is a homophone for row, but is already plural
Many words that have a "sound" may include onomatopoeic words, like "buzz" or "boom," as well as words that describe sound qualities, such as "loud" or "whisper." Additionally, words related to noise, music, or speech often have a direct or indirect association with sound.
Sounds or beats for music
Yes, the Y in spy has a long I sound. The plural noun spies uses the IE for the same sound.
The plural form of the last name Welch is Welches.
The plural of the noun buzz (a sound) is buzzes. The slang use to mean "a rumored situation" would have no plural.
The plural form of Cameron is Camerons.
The plural form of rhonchus, a continuous snorelike sound in the throat or bronchial tubes, due to a partial obstruction, is rhonchi.
In a command prompt or script, "echo off" is a command that disables the echoing of commands being executed to the console. This means that any commands or output will not be displayed while the script or commands are running.
Plural possessive nouns indicate ownership of more than one item by adding an apostrophe after the plural form of the noun. For example, "the dogs' toys" shows that the toys belong to more than one dog.
Yes, some irregular nouns change their vowel sound to form the plural. For example, "man" becomes "men" and "foot" becomes "feet."
According to the dialect or region, it may have either a short OO sound (to rhyme with woof) or a long OO (long U) sound to rhyme with goof and aloof.The usual plural is roofs, but the older plural roovesalways has a long OO sound, to rhyme with proves or grooves.
The proper plural Thais (people from Thailand) is pronounced like the word "ties." The plural with the TH sound is thighs.