I answered a very similar question but not close enough to be a dupe, so I'll paraphrase here.
My own preference would be to have a transformation engine along with a set of transformations (surprisingly enough) for doing the actual work.
You would run through the transformations (from specific to general) and, when a match was found, apply the transformation to the word.
Regular expressions would be an ideal approach to this due to their expressiveness. An example rule set for converting plural to singular could be:
1. If the word is fish, return fish.
2. If the word is sheep, return sheep.
3. If the word is "radii", return "radius".
4. If the word is "types", return "type".
5. If the word ends in "ii", replace that "ii" with "us" (octopii,virii).
: : : : :
97. If a word ends with -ies, I replace the ending with -y
98. If a word ends with -es, I remove this ending.
99. Otherwise, I just remove the trailing -s.
Remember that this is an example, so don't give me a hard time if they're not entirely perfect English. In any case, that just means you should add more rules, which is the whole essence of the answer.
Note that an earlier version of the rules may not have had entry number 4. However, when we found the problem with "types" being transformed to "typ" at rule 98, we then created a higher-priority transformation at 4 to cater for this.
You'll basically need to keep this transformation table updated as you find all those wondrous exceptions (and there are many) that English has spawned.
A similar scheme could be put together for the other direction, singular to plural.
The major problem with this is that you'll have to catch all those edge cases that English is famous for but, short of convincing the entire planet to speak Esperanto, that may be your best shot :-)