-s
Dry is a verb, and only nouns have plurals.
No. The word curious is an adjective. Only nouns and pronouns have plurals in English. If you mean curios, that is the plural of the noun curio.
you will loose fat in the body when you do proper diet
1. adding -es to the word 2. changing the y to i & adding -es 3. dropping the last letter & adding -ies 4. adding -s to the word
Nouns have three cases:Subjective (nominative) nouns are functioning as the subject of a sentence or clause.Objective nouns that are functioning as the object of a verb or a preposition.Possessive: (genitive) a noun that shows that something belongs to it; possession is shown by adding an apostrophe 's' to the end of the noun or only an apostrophe to the end of some nouns that already end with 's'.
Yes, nouns ending in y preceded by a vowel form their plurals by adding s. For example, "essay" becomes "essays" and "donkey" becomes "donkeys."
Nouns ending in 'y' preceded by a vowel form their plurals by adding the letter 's'. Examples:one day, two daysone boy, two boysone play, two playsone blue-jay, two blue-jays
yes, such as: way-->ways valley-->valleys decoy-->decoys guy-->guys
Most nouns ending in o preceded by a vowel are pluralized by simply adding an "s" on the end of the word; for example:photo becomes photoszoo becomes zoosmemo becomes memoskangaroo becomes kangaroos
The plural forms of those nouns are:cry - criesboy - boysbaby - babiesmonkey - monkeysvalley - valleyscity - citiesparty - partiesYou will notice that the nouns ending in 'y' preceded by a consonant change the 'y' to 'i', before adding 'es'.The nouns that end in 'y' preceded by a vowel, simply add an 's'.
Yes, that is correct. The general rule is that nouns ending in a vowel followed by "y" form their plurals by simply adding an "s" to the singular form. For example, "valley" becomes "valleys" in the plural form.
Examples of nouns ending in -y that is preceded by a vowel:alleyboycaychimneydaydonkeyessayjoykeymonkeyplaytoyturkeyvalleyway
"s" or "es" to the end of the word. For example, cat becomes cats, and box becomes boxes.
Examples of plurals that are formed by adding an ending:car, carswish, wishesbox, boxeshero, heroesbaby, babieslife, liveschild, childrenformula, formulaeindex, indicesbeau, beaux
Some nouns ending in -is are made plural by changing the ending to -es; examples:axis - axesbasis - basescrisis - crisesdiagnosis - diagnosesellipsis - ellipsesSome nouns ending in -is are regular plurals adding the ending -es to the end of the word; examples:iris - irisesmantis - mantisesmetropolis - metropolisespelvis - pelvisestrellis - trellises
For nouns ending in 'y' preceded by a consonant, the plural is formed by dropping the 'y' and adding 'ies' to the end of the word.For nouns ending in 'y' preceded by a vowel, the plural is formed by adding an 's' after the ending 'y'.Examples:baby, babiesparty, partiesstory storiesboy, boysplay, playsstray, strays
Nouns ending in -y, preceded by a vowel are made plural by adding an -s. Examples: boys, toys, clays, trays Nouns ending in -y, preceded by a consonant are made plural by dropping the -y and adding -ies. Examples: babies, ladies, parties, armies.