The word 'attitude' is a noun, a singular (plural, attitudes), common, abstract noun; a word for someone's opinions or feelings about something, especially as shown by their behavior; position of the body proper to or implying an action or mental state; the orientation of an aircraft or spacecraft, relative to the direction of travel; an informal (slang) term for a hostile manner.
Example: She's very popular because she always has a positive attitude.
Rife is an adjective. It has no singular or plural form
No in is a preposition -- They walked in the park an adverb -- The doctor is not in today an adjective -- This is the in book at the moment a noun -- He's got an in with the senator.
The singular noun is "louse" and the plural noun is "lice."
noun that are plural in form but singular in meaning
significant isn't a noun, it is an adjective (a descriptive word) so it doesn't have a plural. the noun of significant is significance, which is both plural and singular.
The noun 'favorite' is a singular noun. The plural noun is 'favorites'.The word 'favorite' is also an adjective.
Experts is a plural noun. Expert, singular, can be a noun OR an adjective.
The word impudent is an adjective; an adjective doesn't have singular and plural forms. An adjective can be used to describe a singular or plural noun, for example:an impudent studentmany impudent studentsThe noun form for the adjective impudent is impudence, an uncountable noun (singular only).
Reader is a singular noun; readers in the plural form.
No, it is a plural noun. The singular migrant can be either a noun or an adjective (migrating, nomadic).
No, it is not. It is a plural noun. The singular noun twin can be used as an adjective to mean paired, or identical.
The word 'neurologic' is an adjective.Adjectives don't have singular and plural form.The word 'neurologic' is the adjective form of the noun 'neurology'.The noun 'neurology' is an uncountable noun.
Affluent is an adjective, so does not have a plural form. The noun, both singular and plural, is affluence.
The word proximal is an adjective, a word that describes a noun. Adjectives don't have singular and plural forms.
Singular nouns work with singular adjectives, whereas plural nouns work with plural adjectives.
irrelevant... murderous is adjective not a noun. It doesn't HAVE singular OR plural form..
The pronoun 'your' is a possessive adjective, a word used to describe a noun as belonging to you. Possessive pronouns are not singular or plural, they can describe a singular or plural noun; for example:I've brought your apple.I've brought your apples.