Yes. For words ending in 's', 'ch', 'x' or s-like sounds add 'es' to the end to form the plural.Business > businesses
One is coccyx (tailbone).Access/accessory Success/succeed
You answered your question in your question. The answer is Sure and Sugar.
It is actually the C (before I or E) or the Z that sound, in the speech of most people from Spain, like the TH in English. The S in Spanish words (both in Spain and in Latin America) sounds like S. Words like "siento" ("I feel") and "ciento" ("hundred") evolved in Spahish with different sounds, from older Latin words with different sounds. In most other Spahish-speaking countries, those sounds merged into the same sound. In a similar way, English speakers from some regions pronounce "do" and "due" differently, while others pronounce them the same.
The "s" in "sits" sounds like an "s," not a "z."
it should sound like an "s"pronunciation of exception: ik-sep-shuh n"x" sounds like "ks", usually. The "c" in exceptioncarries on the "s" sound.
Christine Salac Dubov has written: 'Knock!' 'Knock! and other sounds' -- subject(s): Words for Sounds, Juvenile literature 'Ding dong! and other sounds' -- subject(s): Juvenile literature, Sound, Words for Sounds
The Greeks don't (and didn't) use any letter shaped like that. A number of words begin with sigma (which sounds like s) although it is rather infrequent eg "sigma", "sou" "soi"
Words that end in -ch, x, s or s-like sounds, will require an -es for the plural:more than one witch = witchesmore than one box = boxesmore than one gas = gasesmore than one bus = busesmore than one kiss = kisses
Yes, "Sounds spectacular" is an example of alliteration because the words start with the same sound "s".
There's the "s" sound like in "bus" and the other is like in "cars".
"Joyeux Noël" is pronounced "zhwah-YUH no-ELL".The J sounds like the S in the English words measure and vision. The -eux sounds like the oo in good or soot.