However, when a word ends in a “-y” preceded by avowel, then we simply add an “-s” as usual. There are some nouns that are irregular. They do not adhere to spelling rules, and so these need to be memorized. Continue reading... ...
An uncountable noun generally refers to a thing in its entirety. The context, where it is used, may give some rough idea about its amount. For instance, water is an uncountable noun. When we hear a sentence such as ‘The water in the sea is polluted’ we can guess that this refers ...
It is also possible that for few nouns ending with ‘o’ preceded by a consonant, we add the letter ‘s’ to form their plurals. For example: Piano – Pianos Photo – Photos Rule 5 If a singular noun ends with a sound like ‘s’ such as ‘ss’, ‘sh’, ‘ch’, ‘x’, ‘z...
that ends with a consonant followed by the letter Y. When this is true, you need to drop the Y and add an IES. For example, the noun fly ends in an L and a Y. To correctly spell the plural form of FLY you would replace the Y with and an I and add ES. When a noun ends ...
To navigate the site, probably the easiest way is to click on the “Starts with” menu with the beginning letter you’re looking for. For a noun that ends in a certain letter, first click to “Nouns ending in” link to be taken to a menu with A, B, C… through Z choices. ...
While the artist has impeccable technique, she employs naïve brushwork that resembles amateur paintings as well as bright colours, which are accentuated with distorted perspective and proportions. From the painting, the viewer grasps a profound absurdity and a deceptively light yet weight y humour....
the book; that English teacher; a wish; my latest idea 3.1 可数名词Plural forms We usually add –s to make a plural noun: book > books; school > schools; friend > friends We add -es to nouns ending in –ss; -ch; -s; -sh; -x ...
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In Section 5 we turn to languages with the subject-verb-object (SVO) order in the main clause and based on this order alone, one would expect them to be head-initial types. However, we show that the SVO type is not uniform; instead, SVO languages fall into separate headedness subgroups...