The spelling 'fish' can be both singular and the plural (One fish, two fish, red fish, blue fish... to quote Dr. Seuss).
Examples:
Plural: Look at all the fish.
Singular: I caught one fish.
But the plural fishes can be used when referring to more than one type of fish.
--
For types of fish, the same applies, where the plural of trout may be trout or trouts, and the plural of bass may be bass or basses.
"Children", "Women" and "Fish" are plural words that do not end with an 's'. There are many more.
All musical words that end in O add an S to form the plural (altos, solos, pianos).
With an -es, yes. Fish is used as both a singular and plural, but "fishes" is a variant plural form and is sometimes used to imply "multiple kinds of fish" as opposed to "multiple fish of the same kind."
Try writing this question in English. Most plural nouns do end in s. Perhaps you mean that you want a list of nouns that end in s but are not plural.
A surname is a proper noun. The possessive forms for proper nouns follow the same rules as common nouns:Possessives are formed by adding an apostrophe -s ('s) to the end of the word, or just an apostrophe (') to then end of plural nouns that already end with -s. Examples:Mr. Brown's house, or the plural: the Browns' house.Ms. Bass's house, or the plural: the Basses' house.Mr. Cruz's house, or the plural: the Cruzes' house.Since surnames do not have irregular plural forms, a plural surname will always end with an -s; the plural possessive form will always end with -'s.
The children's clubhouse is the correct plural possessive form.When a plural noun does not end with an s, the possessive is formed just like a singular noun that does not end with an s; add an apostrophe s ('s) to the end of the word.
No, but you can make it plural by adding an "s" to the end.
The "s" on the end makes it a plural.
Chunks with the s on the end
it's plural because it has a 's' at the end.
Plural nouns that end in s form the possessive by adding an apostrophe (') after the ending s.Plural nouns that do not end in s form the possessive by adding an apostrophe s ('s) to the end of the word.Examples:The horses' stalls are cleaned each morning.The children's coats all hung in a row.
The children's clubhouse is the correct plural possessive form.When a plural noun does not end with an s, the possessive is formed just like a singular noun that does not end with an s; add an apostrophe s ('s) to the end of the word.