The plural form is principles.
The plural is diverticula.
The plural of bin is bins.
The plural of stimulus is stimuli.
The plural of necessity is necessities.
No plural for radium.
The word principle is a noun. The plural form is principles.
The plural of polyhedron is polyhedra (same principle as "phenomenon" and "phenomena".
The plural form is principles.
The plural of the noun principal is principals (loan values, school heads, or those with a proprietary interest). The plural of the homophone principle is principles.
"Policy" is singular; the plural is "policies".
A principle can be a precept, rationale, or rule.(The plural principles has a more specific connotation, that being the rules or precepts by which someone lives; as in having good ones.)
Yes, "criteria" is the plural form of "criterion." The word "criterion" refers to a standard or principle used to make a judgment or decision, while "criteria" refers to multiple standards or principles.
Relatives is a noun. It's the plural form of relative.
Ethics is the plural form. Ethic is the singular form; a general principle or belief that affects the way that people behave. The plural form, ethics is also an uncountable noun; a word for the study of principles of right and wrong.
Something given or admitted; a fact or principle granted; that upon which an inference or an argument is based; -- used chiefly in the plural., The quantities or relations which are assumed to be given in any problem.
Principle of conservation of energy Principle of conservation of momentum Principle of relativity Principle of causality Principle of least action Principle of symmetry and invariance
The principle parts are the infinitive, which is usually the same as the plural present; simple past; and past participle. "Compete" itself is the infinitive, and other two principal parts are both "competed".