If you're talking about a quantity of a given flour, the word does not have a plural. 'Flour' is a non-count (i.e. collective) noun.
If you're referring to two or more different types of flour, the plural is 'flours.' Example: "Combine the whole wheat and rye flours in a large bowl."
The plural of loaf (of bread) is loaves
You gave them several loaves of bread.
The plural form for the noun loaf is loaves; the plural possessive form is loaves'.Consider this example:The chef complained that the loaves' crusts were too thick.
The plural of loaf is loaves.Two example sentences for "loaves" are:Please pick up two loaves of bread from the shop.The delivery driver loaded the loaves of bread into his lorry.
The word bread is a mass noun. A loaf of bread is one unit; loaves of bread, slices of bread, or pieces of bread are plural forms for bread.The plural form for mass nouns is reserved for 'types of' or 'kinds of'; for example 'The choice of breads was Italian, French, rye, and pita.'
The noun loaf is the singular, the noun loaves is the plural. Either is correct depending on use:I will pick up a loaf of bread on my way home.We baked five loaves of bread for the bake sale.
"Loaves" is the plural; the singular is "loaf". Example sentence:Mom baked six loaves of bread for the bake sale.
A packet of bread is also a loaf of bread.
It's a form of the slang verb to loaf, meaning to be lazy and not work. E.g. "He is a useless employee. He loafs around all day and does nothing and expects to be paid for it."It is not the plural for the noun loaf, a unit of bread. One loaf of bread, two loaves of bread.
The mice ate two loaves of bread in one night.
Yes, loaves is a noun, a common, plural noun; the singular form is loaf.
The plural form for the noun loaf is loaves. (e.g. loaves of bread).