That is the correct spelling of the word "sky" (plural skies).
The gray skies cast a sense of dismal gloom through me.
The plural spelling is skies. A consonant-Y ending to a word usually results in it changing the Y to I and adding -ES.The word sky's is the singular possessive form of the noun sky.The use of the apostrophe S ('s) indicates that a noun that follows belongs to that noun. An apostrophe should almost never be used to indicate a plural.Example: The sky's color darkened.The noun 'sky' is a countable noun (plural 'skies') as a word used when referring to the weather or specific atmospheric conditions.The noun 'sky' is an uncountable noun as a word for the atmosphere that surrounds the earth.
The plural of sky is skies, as in "Nothing but blue skies up ahead."
Yes, the noun 'sky' is a countable noun. The plural form 'skies' is a word most often used when referring to the weather or specific atmospheric conditions.The noun 'sky' is an uncountable noun as a word for the atmosphere that surrounds the earth.
Skies is the place above the earth. "The skies are clear and there are no clouds"
That is the correct spelling of the word "sky" (plural skies).
Yes, the word 'skies' is a noun, the plural form for the singular noun sky; a word for the dome-shaped expanse extending upwards from the horizon; outer space, as seen from the earth; a word for a thing.The plural form 'skies' is usually used to refer to weather or atmospheric conditions.
"Skies" is a one-syllable word. It is pronounced as "skahyz."
it means in sanskrit ' of the skies' or simply the universe............
Skies is the plural of sky, but the two can often by interchangeable. Take for instanceThe sky is so blue today.Could also be written as a plural:The skies are so blue today.We flew 30,000 feet up through the skies.I often look up at the skies.
The word skier is a noun. A skier is someone who skies.
Both are correct, but the meaning is not the same.-- The word skies is the plural of sky (usually for effect, e.g. the dark skies above the valley).-- The word sky's is a possessive with 's at the end (e.g. the sky's deep blue color).*The apostrophe form can be used, as in speech, to mean (the) sky is (e.g. the sky's the limit, or I can see that the sky's cloudy today)
Blue.
The gray skies cast a sense of dismal gloom through me.
Weather is derived from the latin term "Wethera" which means "the study of the skies".
The plural spelling is skies. A consonant-Y ending to a word usually results in it changing the Y to I and adding -ES.The word sky's is the singular possessive form of the noun sky.The use of the apostrophe S ('s) indicates that a noun that follows belongs to that noun. An apostrophe should almost never be used to indicate a plural.Example: The sky's color darkened.The noun 'sky' is a countable noun (plural 'skies') as a word used when referring to the weather or specific atmospheric conditions.The noun 'sky' is an uncountable noun as a word for the atmosphere that surrounds the earth.