There is no plural form of the word 'got'. It is the past tense of the word 'get'. The word get means 'to receive' or 'to acquire'.
The plural is toothpastes.
Much does not have a plural form.
Wizards is the plural form.
The plural form for the noun memo is memos.
The plural form for the singular noun dot is dots.
No. Got is the past tense of get, not a noun. And gots is not an English word.
The plural form of the noun 'guess' is guesses.
No, the form "man" is a singular noun. The plural form is men.Examples:A man got on the bus at Fourth Street.Two more men got on at Sixth Street.
The plural of guess is guesses, e.g. It took him several guesses before he got the answer.
For the verb to get, the form used with singular and plural nouns is only different in the third-person singular (he, she, it).I getyou gethe/she getswe getyou get (plural)they getFor the past tense, all subjects use the form "got."
'Have not' would be used with a plural number of people, i.e. 'they have not got a banana'. If it's only one person who lacks this banana then it would be 'he has not got a banana'.
You got it, the noun salesman would be one and plural is salesmen.
The words ending in -ief can form normal plurals. In this case, it is chiefs.An example of the other form is thief, which becomes thieves.
In the sense of "toast," health could be pluralized, as in "We drank so many healths we got sick." Otherwise, it has no plural.
The noun 'family' is a singular noun; the plural form is families. Examples: singular: A family of raccoons has made a den under the garage. plural: Four families got together to plan this block party.
There is no plural form. Do and Do not are verbs
The plural form of him, her, or it is them. (objective pronouns)