No, there aren't. Cake doesn't care what you name your tables as long as you adhere to Cake's naming conventions. It generates the schemas it uses for magic model methods the first time a model/s is loaded by a controller; you don't have to lift a finger. See http://book.cakephp.org/view/903/Model-and-Database-Conventions
Best advice: don't fight Cake on this. If you really cannot adhere to to Cake's conventions, you might as well not use Cake; it's stupidly difficult, confusing and succeeding just means you've lost most of Cake's heavy lifting abilities. Pluralizing your table names isn't THAT bad, and Cake will be happy.
This functionality is already available in 1.3 - name your tables anything that pleases you (as long as they're plural words.)
-- You'd probably be well-served to check out baking apps in the console so you can get familiar with what Cake wants to see and how it works on different table layouts.
Edit after clarification:
Your models, controllers, and view directories all share a common name, like so:
// in /app/models/rate.php
class Rate extends AppModel {
var $name = 'Rate';
// in /app/controllers/rates_controller.php -- note the underscore
class RatesController extends AppController {
// controllers are capitalized + plural
var $name = 'Rates';
// in /app/views/rates/*.ctp - Cake's magic autoRender expects to find a view file with
// the same name as the action rendering it - the view for Rates::index() is index.ctp
All of your models extend cake's AppModel class (which extends cake's Model class), no prefix needed. All controllers will extend Cake's AppController class - the class name is suffixed with Controller, and the file name is suffixed with _Controller.
You'll fine AppModel and AppController in /app, and they exist expressly for whatever app-wide custom methods / properties you may have. Since all of your models / controllers extend them, inheritance automatically disperses whatever properties / methods you place in them - for example, Auth. ^_^
But you can still name a table Models, or Controllers, or Views, or whatever, I guess. The $name property is an alias; you can create multiple instances of the same table in the same model by aliasing it with a different name. You can create models without tables, and you can switch between multiple tables - or databases, or servers - in a single model. You can also create non-database-type data objects (such as flat xml files) for your models. Dynamically named classes / methods ($$Model::save(), etc) are what's running under the hood anyway. I've done something similar in iterations for the sake of DRYing up my app and I didn't have a problem. (Although I personally doubt actually pulling off a local model named Model would be worth the effort you'd put into the experiment...)
And on that note, Cake's API spells out all it's classes their methods, etc. (generates off the comments in the codebase):
http://api13.cakephp.org/classes
HTH. :D