wildabeests
Headcounts or head counts. Headcount is a noun, and it is used to indicate a process where people is counted or the result of this process, so it should not be used the plural form to indicate the number of people counted. The plural form is used to indicates several counting processes (E.g.: The total headcount is 50; The headcounts in each building of the company was incorrect).
The plural of frog is frogs.
The plural of squirrel is squirrels.
The plural of rooster is roosters.
The plural of "lizard" is "lizards."
Yes, it is incorrect. Even though the pronoun "you" can be singular or plural, it is ALWAYS used with a plural verb! The verb "was" is singular, so that is incorrect.
The incorrect plural noun form is 'wolfs'. The correct plural form for wolf is wolves.
Yes, a wildebeest is a mammal.
Teaspoonsful is not necessarily incorrect, but dictionaries use teaspoonfuls as the plural.
The anagram is "calyxes" which is an incorrect English plural of calyx. The Latin form plural is calyces.
Not if you are referring to the plural ("Where do you all live?"), but to ask this of a single person in the same manner would be incorrect.
No, the word "mens" is an incorrect form.The plural noun is "men". The plural possessive form is men's.
'People' is plural for person 'Look at thoose persons'-is incorrect 'Look at thoose people'-is correct
They DON'T!
According to Kate Turabian's A Manual for Writers, letters used as terms do not require an article. (22.2.2)Correct: "Add s to make the the word plural."Incorrect: "Add an s to make the word plural."Incorrect: "Add a s to make the word plural."
According to Kate Turabian's A Manual for Writers, letters used as terms do not require an article. (22.2.2)Correct: "Add s to make the the word plural."Incorrect: "Add an s to make the word plural."Incorrect: "Add a s to make the word plural."
"Platypus" or "platypuses" are both accepted plural forms.The plural of platypus is not platypi. It is unfortunate that some dictionaries include platypi as a plural. Listing "octopi" as the plural of octopus is also incorrect, for the same reason. Both words are from Greek, not Latin."Platypi" is a colloquialism, and incorrect both grammatically and etymologically. The term uses pseudo-Latin rules.