apples, apes, aprons, brothers, books, cats, crooked, cooked, dogs,
Words that end in s, x , ch, sh or z require an -es to form the plural.
True. Sheep for instance
You end it with an es. "Heroes".
Yes. For words ending in 's', 'ch', 'x' or s-like sounds add 'es' to the end to form the plural.Business > businesses
A list of words that end with ES:admiresbootiesclothesduesglasseshadesseriesyes
borradores Words that end in consonants add -es to be made plural; words that end in vowels add -s.
Hard and fast rules are hard to come by but here are some guidelines on words that end in 'es' where an 'e' does not end the singular. 1. Word ends in an 's' or 'ss'
Words ending with s, x, ch, sh, and z add 'es' to the end of the word to form the plural. Examples:class, classesbox, boxesmatch, matcheswish, wisheswaltz, waltzes
The plural forms of words that end in -s, -ch, -xand -z are formed by adding -es, e.g.:fox - foxes; mix - mixes; box - boxeschurch - churches wrench - wrenches; winch - winchesbuzz - buzzes;glass - glasses; class - classes; mess - messes
tu es.(PS You dont pronounce the S at the end of "es")
The letters "es" form the conjugations or plurals of words that already end in an S, X, Z, CH, or SH sound, because the additional sibilant S is pronounced in that way.Example : The word "kiss" already ends in a long sibilant S. The plural "kisses" adds an entire "ES" sound instead of extending the sibilant. The spelling reflects this.Example : The word "catch" becomes "catches", because linguistically you cannot add a sibilant to the end of the "shh" sound.* Only SOME of the words that end in an O use the "es" to form their plural, and this is not a consistent occurrence. Examples are hero (heroes) and potato (potatoes).
It ends in an 's' - pianos.