'Measles' is a singular noun.
The singular form of feet is foot.
The singular form is hilum.
The form plumber is the singular form; the plural form is plumbers.
The singular form would be majesty.
The noun grandmother is the singular form.
The noun 'measles' is an uncountable noun.The noun measles is plural in form but functions as a singular noun.Examples: He had a case of the measles.
I thought measles was already the singular word. For example, "He has measles." Measles is already plural as well. For example, "They all have measles."
The noun measles, a word for a viral disease, is plural in structure but singular in meaning. The noun measles is an uncountable (mass) noun.The word "measles" is plural when referring to the spots on the body and singular when you have measles as a disease. So you may have to say "cases of measles" to pluralize multiple episodes of the illness.For example, "His measles were bothering him." or "We cannot handle all the measles cases." It seems you have to throw in an extra word to differentiate between the spots and the outbreaks. Do you have an example sentence?Although measles is a plural noun, it is treated as singular.
Measles refers to a viral disease and, while the word is plural in structure, it is singular in meaning.
Measles is the plural form of the disease measles.
Here are some examples of nouns that are plural in form but singular in meaning: gallows glasses headquarters news pajamas pants scissors series species billiards athletics physics Philippines measles tweezers dominoes economics civics politics
The word 'rabies' is an uncountable noun, similar to measles, diabetes, arthritis, etc. The noun 'rabies' is expressed as a case of rabies or cases of rabies.
The singular form of the demonstrative pronoun 'these' is this.
The singular form of "that" is "it."
The singular form is cuff.
it is already in its singular form.
"Stratum" is the singular form of stratum. The plural form is "strata".