Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
Don't pluralise scientific (Latin) names in an English way: 'Velociraptors' is wrong.
It is incorrect to pluralise "Māori" and loan words from Māori by adding an "s".
There doesn't seem to be any way of pluralizing in his language.
He and his associates had definitely decided to pluralize the term.
The new word is then pluralized as a word in its own right.
They may also be used as count nouns and pluralized.
Players are not allowed to pluralize existing words by simply adding an "s" on the end of a word.
I'm trying to shake things up and pluralize things a bit.
The title is pluralized to reflect the grid of images in the video.
You pluralized the name when it should have been possessivized."
Some mass nouns can be pluralized, but the meaning in this case may change somewhat.
Sometimes the 88 or 73 is pluralized by appending an s. These number codes are at least a century old.
The same is true for cheval pluralized as chevaux and many others.
I think sometimes the word overseas is pluralized unnecessarily.
Other words are pluralized with an 's' too.
It is thought the word "meadow" was pluralized to come more trippingly off the tongue.
How did you expect me to make anything clever out of "Flight Attendant", much less pluralize it?
Mauritian Creole nouns do not change their form when they are pluralized.
Nouns are pluralized and also have a dual marker.
Some words can be pluralized with either of the suffixes to denote the plural.
Proper nouns are not pluralized, even in writing.
These may be pluralized with the marker -tu.
He did so here, acknowledging the place's origins by pluralizing the Greek word for the animal, "aix."
The second may of course have its own advantages, in terms of pluralizing and relativizing the student's perspectives on the world.
French-loaned compounds with a head at the beginning tend to pluralize both words, according to French practice:
It is proper to pluralize this term.