Thermocouples cannot be connected directly to any Plus+1 input unless maybe you only care about very high temperatures, with low accuracy, and with calibration on each unit.
A Type-K thermocouple produces only 12.2mV at 300 deg C, and 25mV at 600 C. The difference between 1000 and 1010C is only 0.39mV. Meanwhile, the Plus+1 analog inputs throw away a bunch of counts at the bottom due to input offset limitations of the electronics, which means even at the lowest measuring range you won't read anything below 12.9 mV, and at the 5V range it starts measuring at 20mV. Sure, there's the low-end precision spec of 0.09mV, but there's also the "Worst case error" of 27mV.
Read all about the analog input limitations here:
Plus 1 MC050-1xx Controller Family Technical InformationIf you cannot use a RTD or another type of sensor then you will need to use a signal conditioner to convert the thermocouple signal to something like 0-5V, which is what I do for all thermocouples. Other than expanding the measurement voltage to a useful range it electrically isolates the signal from other electrical noise, has a better input impedance, and many conditioner models linearize the output so every step change in temperature has the same step change in output voltage.