I would say the answer to the original question is " In everyday use, " money " is an uncountable noun, and has no plural.
12.
The word " grits " is an uncountable noun, cf . " mashed potatoes . " It derives from the Old English word " grytt, " meaning coarse meal.
13.
The name given to a grammatical category ( as an uncountable noun ) is generally also used ( as a countable noun ) to denote any of the possible values for that category.
14.
A good example would be adding the article " the " to the uncountable noun " mud " ( for example, " I stepped in the mud on my way home . ")
15.
Even if in Italian the word is plural ( like the Italian word " salami ", plural of " salame " ), the English word pepperoni is used as a uncountable noun.
16.
Some people seem to think that " children " is an uncountable noun, but I wouldn't suggest that means they're idiots .-- [ pleasantries ] 06 : 17, 3 May 2014 ( UTC)
17.
Should the proper nouns simply be removed from the uncountable noun category, or should I follow Keenan Pepper's suggestion and leave in proper nouns that are generally used as mass nouns, such as " Drano " and " Nutella "?
18.
The term " comics " refers to the comics medium when used as an uncountable noun and thus takes the singular : " comics " is " a medium " rather than " comics " are " a medium ".
19.
Some uncountable nouns such as " data ", " equipment ", " money " and " software " are also often pluralised in Kenyan English, but this is especially prevalent in the rural areas and among the lower and lower-middle classes.
20.
I guess botanists and landscapers may use a jargon in which " soil " is treated as a countable noun ( thus having a singular and a plural form ), but " soil " is normally an uncountable noun, so does not require an article before it.