The singular noun is journey.
Examples:
A journey of a thousand miles begins with one step. (singular)
Marco Polo wrote of his journeys in "The Travels of Marco Polo". (plural)
Yes, journeys is the plural form of the noun journey and the third person, singular, present of the verb to journey.
Both are correct depending on the context:journeys is the plural form for the singular noun journeyjourney's is the singular possessive formExamples:plural: My journeys have now all ended.possessive: My journey's end will come soon.The word journeys is also the third person, singular, present, of the verb to journey (journeys, journeying, journeyed):He often journeys to Europe.
The noun 'journey' is a singular, common, abstract noun; a word for a concept; a word for a thing.The word 'journey' is also a verb: journey, journeys, journeying, journeyed.
Yes. Hay is a singular noun. A Singular noun means one item only. So technically, hay is a singular noun.
The noun 'theory' is a singular noun. The plural noun is 'theories'.
The noun 'mice' is the plural form of the singular noun 'mouse'.
Yes the word question is a singular noun. The plural noun is questions.
The noun mailbox is the singular form; the plural is mailboxes.
journeys
Feet is a plural noun. Foot is a singular noun.
The noun juggler is a singular noun. The plural noun is jugglers.
The noun school is the singular form.The plural noun is schools.