No. Literature is a collective noun, like poetry, and does not normally have a plural.
just add S to race for the plural form "races" is the plural for race
The plural form of fair is fairs. You add an s on the end to make it plural.
Just add an S to make it brochures
You simply add an s thus disasters = plural form of disaster.
Just add -s -- ointments
Just add an "s". Planets.
You just add an s - mists.
The plural form for the noun cricket is crickets. The plural possessive form is crickets'.Example: The crickets' chirping reminded us that we were in the country.
Plural nouns that end in s form the possessive by adding an apostrophe (') after the ending s.Plural nouns that do not end in s form the possessive by adding an apostrophe s ('s) to the end of the word.Examples:The horses' stalls are cleaned each morning.The children's coats all hung in a row.
To make the word 'request' (as a noun) into its plural form, add 's' at the end of the word: requests.
The plural possessive form of "Lois" is "Loises'." This is because "Lois" is a plural noun, so to indicate possession by multiple Lois entities, you add an apostrophe after the plural form "Loises." The apostrophe comes after the "s" because the plural form already ends in "es."
The rules for plural possessive nouns are:If the plural form already ends with -s, add an apostrophe after the existing -s. teacher, teachers, teachers'street, streets, streets'lady, ladies, ladies'If the plural form does not end with -s, add an -'s to the end of the word. child, children, children'ssheep, sheep, sheep'sman, men, men's