Does the plural of hairdresser in English add s? How to read it? Does the s at the end read s or Z?

Does the plural of hairdresser in English add s? How to read it? Does the s at the end read s or Z?

It's plus s
Because s is after a vowel, it's pronounced Z
Building plural plus es or
S
S! should
Adding s is inevitable
S
What is the plural of food
Food can be used as countable noun food, but it can also be used as uncountable noun food
Does the plural of hero add s directly?
Our English teacher said that it's good to add s directly, but people on the Internet say that adding es is right?
It's easy to remember and not easy to make mistakes with one sentence:
Negro heroes love potatoes, tomatoes, Negro, hero, potato, tomato,
Others end with O and plural - s, such as photos
Why do some English plural words add es instead of S
Do you want food in plural here? Why?
They have such traditional food as roast turkey,pumpkin pies,apples,squash and so on.
thank you. I know food is plural when it means variety. How to judge whether it is a general term or a kind? It feels like this is a general term...
unwanted.
Because the food here does not refer to the types of food, but collectively (that is, traditional food)
Is there a plural form of leaf plus s directly
Except to change f into V Plus es
Is there no other plural?
There's no other form. That's it
In which case should we add es at the end of the plural?
When the last letter of a word is a vowel, and the word is a living thing rather than a dead thing, add es at the end. The vowels are: A, e, I, O, U
Why does the predicate of different kinds of food use the plural? When do you use kind to modify the singular?
Different kinds of food is plural, so the predicate verb is plural~
If this kind of food is singular in the middle, it is singular after it
Food is an uncountable noun, but different kinds of food can be counted clearly. Just like the word fruit, it means that the general term of fruit is uncountable, but when it refers to different kinds of fruit, it is countable. The different kinds of food here are expressed by the phrases "kind of", so we use plural predicate. A kind of is followed by a countable noun, singular, plural, and uncountable noun, but the predicate can only use the singular. ... unfold
Food is an uncountable noun, but different kinds of food can be counted clearly. Just like the word fruit, it means that the general term of fruit is uncountable, but when it refers to different kinds of fruit, it is countable. The different kinds of food here are expressed by the phrases "kind of", so we use plural predicate. A kind of is followed by a countable noun, singular, plural, and uncountable noun, but the predicate can only use the singular. Put it away
Do you want to add s to the plural of Japanese?
No, Japanese is a collective noun, similar to Chinese and people