Few is a pronoun, adjective, and determiner. It is always used in conjunction with plural nouns.
The indefinite pronoun 'few' takes the place of an unknown or unnamed small number of people or things. The word 'few' is a plural form, taking a plural verb form. Example:Many are called but few arechosen.
the plural of absent is absents. As in "there are a few absents in the class".
"One of the few people who have" is correct because "people" is a plural noun, so the verb should also be plural to agree with it.
The plural noun of brook is brooks.For example: The village has a few brooksrunning through it.
The plural indefinite pronoun is few, a word that takes the place of a number, more than two but not many.
collectively, truth, but if you are talking about a few specific truths, then it's truths
ARCANA (plural of arcanum)
Impose is a verb. Except for a few very old core vocabulary words, verbs do not have singular or plural forms. imposes
Agenda. Although few people use the word agendum any more.
The correct grammar for the sentence is "Here are a few more." In this case, "few" is being used as a plural noun, so the verb "are" should also be plural to agree with it. Using "is" would be incorrect because it is singular and does not match the plural noun "few."
The plural is cameos. Another example of just adding an -s is studio/ studios. (What confuses people is that a few words that end in -o need an -es for the plural. A good example of this is potato: plural, potatoes.)
The plural form for the noun 'punch' is punches.Example: They gave me a few punches.