How to judge the plural form of noun plus s or es

How to judge the plural form of noun plus s or es

The ending of the word is sh, x, th, s, plus es
When an uncountable noun is modified by a plural quantifier, the predicate verb is plural
Am I right?
A large amount of meat is not necessary
Large amounts of meat are subject to change
Right.
No. a large amount of money is a large amount of money in the plural
Yes, eg, larqgs of water are
Who can find some phrases like "neither of." both... And "to use singular or plural predicate verbs
The verb must be singular. Neither of them is right.both Both Lily and Lucy are students
Neither nor is singular
Both.. and in the plural
I agree with the one on the second floor, but there is a wrong word
Neither nor is singular
Both.. and in the plural
The complex number of hair-----
In the title of writing words as required, do you draw a slash or copy hair?
Hair is uncountable, the plural is itself!
Just fill in s in the - -.
Well, yes, the plural is himself!
What about quantifier followed by plural predicate of countable noun in English
In the plural, consistent with plural countable nouns, not affected by quantifiers
I wish you a better future
Is this pair of glasses plural or singular
It's plural. It should be used with plural verbs
This pair of glasses are very good.
Please accept it in time, thank you!
Plural usage of hair
There is a hair in my soup
I don't like wearing long hair
Why is hair used differently in two sentences
The first one refers to a hair. The second one refers to long hair
Quantifier plus countable noun, to indicate its plural form is not, quantifier and noun should add s
Quantifiers should be added, nouns can be added or not
a pair of_________ (shoes, trousers.) is it plural or singular?
Singular number depends on a pair
When a pair of shoes is the subject, the predicate verb is singular because the head word is pair, which is singular
Two pairs of …… The predicate is plural
What's the plural of "hair"
The following is an authoritative explanation from Oxford: / hee (R); HZR / N (a) [C] one of the fine thread like strands that grow from the skin of people and animals
Just use hair