Some examples of singular nouns that have the same form in both singular and plural are: sheep, deer, fish, aircraft.
Just add "s" to the end. Valleys, delays, stays, boys, toys and moneys. Although monies is also acceptable. This is English. There is always an exception that proves the rule.
The plural form of "Chinese" is "Chinese." The word stays the same in both the singular and plural forms.
Some word that have the same form for singular or plural are:deergallowsheadquartersoffspringsalmonseriessheepswineReindeerFish
stays the same. water lilies
converse stays the same in plural because it is a name and you could not change the name.
Exaggerated is an adjective. It stays the same with both singular and plural nouns.
Just add "s" to the end. Valleys, delays, stays, boys, toys and moneys. Although monies is also acceptable. This is English. There is always an exception that proves the rule.
Sheep and deer are nouns that are the same singular and plural. Example sentences:A sheep has escaped the pen.The sheep have escaped the pen.A deer was in the road.The deer were in the road.
It stays the same. eg, Grouse, not grouses ect,
The word "legal" is an adjective. It stays the same whether it is modifying a singular or a plural noun.
The plural form of "Chinese" is "Chinese." The word stays the same in both the singular and plural forms.
panata is the Maori word for Pantha. I believe the word stays the same for both singular and plural words.
Poder respirar = to be able to breathe. 'respirar' stays the same, but: I can't = no puedo.... you (informal, singular) can't = no puedes... you(formal, singular)/he/she can't = no puede.... we can't = no podemos.... you (informal, plural) can't = no podeis.... you (formal, plural)/they can't = no pueden....
The noun 'thanks' is a plural, uncountable noun; it has no singular form.The noun 'thanks' is a type of aggregate noun, a word representing an indefinite number of elements.
It just stays moose. Moose is one of those words where it means both singular and plural forms.
Oh, dude, the plural of scissors is... drumroll... scissors! Yeah, it's one of those words that just stays the same whether you have one or a bunch of them. So, next time you need to cut something, just grab your trusty scissors and snip away!
It stays the same