The plural form of panic is panics.
Sirs is the plural of sir
Days of the week are often pluralized; for example, many people eat fish on Fridays.
calm,confident,brave,bold
The word "panic" contains an open syllable and a closed syllable. The first syllable "pan" is a closed syllable because it ends in a consonant, while the second syllable "ic" is an open syllable, as it ends in a vowel. Thus, "panic" features both types of syllables.
To inject a sense of panic into the doomed prey..
Cylinders.
McDonald's
boats
cobwebs
Martinez's
You wouldn't pluralize "processing", but you would pluralize "process" making more than one process "processes".
Handkerchiefs is correct.
Fournesses is the plural of Fourness
Sirs is the plural of sir
Folisis is the plural of Folisi
Do you mean, "How do you pluralize the phrase 'follow God's word' ? 1) Follow the words of God, or 2) Follow God's words.
Do not use an apostrophe to make a number plural. 1990s is the plural form of 1990