The singular form of "phenomenon" is "phenomenon" itself, while the plural form is "phenomena." This distinction is often used in scientific and philosophical contexts to refer to observable events or occurrences. In everyday language, "phenomena" may also be used informally to describe multiple instances of something remarkable or extraordinary.
USAGE NOTE Phenomenon is the only singular form of this noun; phenomena is the usual plural. Phenomenons may also be used as the plural in nonscientific writing when the meaning is "extraordinary things, occurrences, or persons": They were phenomenons in the history of music. (from answers.com)
No, it is not. The word phenomenon is a singular noun, and the plural is phenomena. The adjective form is "phenomenal" (extraordinary or exceptional).
The singular form is phenomenon.
The plural form of the noun phenomenon is phenomena.The plural possessive form is phenomena's.Example: These phenomena's occurrences are very rare.
Mitochondria is already plural. The singular form is Mitochondrion.Mitochondria IS plural. The single form is mitochondrion.
The word 'Phenomenon' is singular. The plural form is 'Phenomena'.
"Phenomena" is plural, with "phenomenon" being the singular form.
Phenomena is a plural noun. The singular form is phenomenon. There is some tendency to use phenomena as a singular noun, but it is not actually a legitimate form.
Phenomenon is singular and phenomena is plural
is phenomenon plural or singular
plural word is phenomena singular is phenomenon
The word 'criteria' is the plural form of the singular word 'criterion'. 'Those are the criteria that I used in making my decision.' 'That is the criterion that I used in making my decision.' It is wrong to use the word 'criteria' as a singular. Similarly, it is wrong to use 'phenomena' as a singular. It is the plural form of the singular word 'phenomenon'.
Phenomenon is singular, phenomena is plural. Phenomenons is also acceptable
Phenomenon is the singular form of phenomena.
It is singular. The plural is ellipses.
"Is" is the singular form of the verb "to be," used with singular subjects. "Are" is the plural form used with plural subjects.
Vita is singular. The plural form of vita is vitae