Sorry, but I think Google is probably wrong. Most Latin nouns ending
in -us are 2nd declension and the plural would therefore be -i, but
census is 4th declension (like portus - a port) where the plural is
portus (pronounced portoos, ie a long u). I have checked in the
Collins and the Oxford Latin dictionaries and they both give the same
answer. We use many Latin endings for 2nd declension words, termini
for example, so censi might be allowable  were it to be Latin, but it
is not.
John

2009/2/22 Meg Greenwood <scotques...@bartnet.net>:
> I Googled for the phrase "Plural of Census" and got a nice hit saying the
> correct plural is 'censi' but it doesn't work well in current day useage, so
> its accepted English form is 'Censuses'.  Other hits agreed to varying
> degrees and then there were the downgrades into 'argumenti'....MegG
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