cactus, fungus, continuous, delicious
she, he, hush, is, see, use, us, his
No, not every word ending in -us changes to -i in the plural form. Some words ending in -us change to -i (e.g. cactus -> cacti), while others may change to -es (e.g. fungus -> fungi) or remain the same in both singular and plural forms (e.g. campus -> campus).
Letters represent sounds created in speech, and the combinations of sounds that create spoken words. Different languages have different words for the same concepts or things, and different rules for how letters are to be pronounced.
blues blue bus sub us
Darjiling
There are many US cities that have 5 letters in their name. Some are Miami, Akron, Alcoa, Butte, and Austin.
sid,us,is,die,ideas......thats all i can think of
ice cue us is sue use
To level up our alphabet itself for us to create more easy words using those new letters in our alphabet. anable the reader to pronounce the words and spell it correctly.
Words from Latin ending in -us form plurals ending in i, e.g. cacti and alumni and more rarely syllabi.As octopus is not Latin, the plural octopi is considered erroneous, although often used.The Greek letters chi, pi, psi and xi have long i sounds.Some words with a long i not at the end of the word include biology, diary, finance, giant, iota, mitosis, pica, rhinoceros, siren, tiny, violent, and wily.
To answer your question. You will have to put TWO periods.
Some common words are: a I me it he she that and but or my our us