Fungi is the standard plural of fungus, because the word is Latin in origin it follows the Latin rules for plurals, however funguses following the English rules for plurals is also now an approved plural of fungus due to its frequency in common usage.
yes, fungus is singular Yes, fungi is plural and fungus is singular.
The plural form of fungus is fungi.
"Fungus" refers to a single organism, while "fungi" is the plural form of fungus, referring to multiple organisms. For example, a single mushroom is a fungus, whereas a patch of mushrooms would be considered fungi.
The noun 'class' is a countable noun, a noun that has a singular and a plural form.Examples:I'm late for my dance class. (singular)My dance classes are expensive, I can't afford to miss them. (plural)Which class of fungus is this? (singular)How many classes of fungus are there? (plural)
It's the only one not ending with 's': 'fungi' is the plural of "fungus'.
Fungus is singular; the plural form is fungi.
The plural form of the noun fungus is fungi.The plural possessive form is fungi's.
yes, fungus is singular Yes, fungi is plural and fungus is singular.
The noun 'fungi' is the plural form of the noun 'fungus'.
Fungus is singular, while fungi is plural.
The plural form of fungus is fungi.
Both fungi and funguses can be used as the plural for fungus.
'Fungi' is the plural of fungus.
fungus is singular, fungi is plural
Fungi is the plural of fungus
Fungi
fungi