Answer. The plural form of k is ks or k's.
The plural form of two is twos.
tigers - Simple English Wiktionary.
The plural form of the word "baby" is "babies".
Thus, “dogs” is a plural noun.
donkeys - Simple English Wiktionary.
noun plural deer or deers.
apples - Simple English Wiktionary.
noun. kan·ga·roo ˌkaŋ-gə-ˈrü plural kangaroos.
The plural of fish is usually fish. When referring to more than one species of fish, especially in a scientific context, you can use fishes as the plural.
When you are talking about more than one kind or species of fish, both 'fish' and 'fishes' are ok to use. There are many different fishes in our pond.
Normally, the plural of “fish” is the same as the singular: “fish.” It's one of a group of irregular plural nouns in English that are identical to the corresponding singular nouns (e.g., “moose,” “sheep”). For example, you might write “The fish scatter as the shark approaches.”
1 fox. /ˈfɑːks/ noun. plural foxes. Britannica Dictionary definition of FOX.
The plural didn't refer to multiple cutting implements, however; it was modeled on the two blades of a single caesorium. By the time that the word scissors appeared in English in the 15th century, it was already fixed as a plural word...that nonetheless referred to one single thing.
McDonald is really the singular, non-possessive noun. If you're talking about two McDonald's restaurants, the restaurant is the word that is holding your plural sense. I can't imagine ever saying "There are two McDonald's down the road."
apples. The apple itself is a pome (fleshy) fruit, in which the ripened ovary and surrounding tissue both become fleshy and edible.
plural bananas. banana. /bəˈnænə/ Brit /bəˈnɑːnə/ noun. plural bananas.
However, given that “platypodes” has for some unfathomable reason never become popular, the dictionary goes on to say that the accepted plural is “platypuses” or (particularly in scientific and conservation contexts) “platypus”. (For the sake of simplicity, we prefer using the second term.)
plural elves /ˈɛlvz/ elf.
The plural of “moose” is the same as the singular: “moose.” It's one of a group of plural nouns in English that are identical to the corresponding singular nouns. So it's wrong to write “mooses.” For example, you might write “There are several moose in the forest.”
turkey /ˈtɚki/ noun. plural turkeys.
peacocks - Simple English Wiktionary.
The plural is usually kiwis; sometimes, kiwi is found as an (invariant) plural form.