anyway. archway. betray. birthday. castaway. crossway. daresay. decay. defray. doorway. essay. everyday. expressway. faraway. foreplay. gainsay. getaway. halfway. headway. inlay. interplay. leeway. mainstay. noonday. nosegay. outlay. overstay. parkway. pathway. quay. railway. runway. sashay. screenplay. takeaway. tideway. underlay. underway. vouvray. washday. waylay. yay. yesterday.
Some nouns that end in -ey are:
eye eyeball
eyelid
eyebrow
eyelash
they just end in s like key would be keys :) ;)
The plural is valleys.Unlike nouns ending in -y (ally, spy), English nouns ending in -ay or -ey form regular S plurals.
The plural is "journeys". Unlike words ending in Y, the -ey words mostly form normal S plurals.
monkey honey money chimney turkey jockey hockey
The singular scura e chiara and the plural scure e chiare in the feminine and the singular scuro e chiaroand the plural scuri e chiari in the masculine are literal Italian equivalents of the English phrase "dark and light." The choice depends upon the gender and number of objects and people so described. The respective pronunciation will be "SKOO-ra ey KYA-ra" and "SKOO-rey KYA-rey" in the feminine and "SKOO-ro ey KYA-ro" and "SKOO-ree ey KYA-ree" in the masculine in Italian.
When a word ends in 'ey' as opposed to just 'y', simply add an s without changing the y. Examples: * donkey - donkeys * velley - valleys * matey - mateys ('matey' being a colloquialism, it probably does not really matter how it is spelt...)
The plural is valleys.Unlike nouns ending in -y (ally, spy), English nouns ending in -ay or -ey form regular S plurals.
The plural is "journeys". Unlike words ending in Y, the -ey words mostly form normal S plurals.
Some examples of words that end with "ey" and sound like "ay" are ballet, convey, and survey.
EtÃ? and anni are Italian equivalents of the English words "age" and "years".Specifically, the word etÃ? is a feminine noun in its singular form. The word anni is a masculine noun in its plural form. The respective pronunciations will be "ey-TA" and "AN-nee" in Italian.
Here are a five words that are spelled with 'ey' but are pronounced like long 'a': They- plural form of he, she, it. Hey- used as a greeting or to call attention. Bey- a provincial governor in the Ottoman Empire. Dey- the title of the governor of Algiers before the French conquest in 1830. Fey- supernatural; unreal; enchanted.
monkey honey money chimney turkey jockey hockey
greyobeypreytheywhey
Hey shey ey
Ero, eras, era, éramos, eraisand eran are Spanish equivalents of the English word "was." Context determines whether "I was" (case 1), "you were" (singular informal or vos form, example 2), "he (it, one, she) was" or "you were" (singular formal, instance 3), "we were" (option 4), "you all were" (informal plural, sample 5) and "they were" or "you all were" (formal plural, selection 6). The respective pronunciations will be "EY-ro," "EY-ras," "EY-ro," "EY-ra-mos," "EY-reyss" and "EY-ran" in Barcelona, Catalunya, and in Uruguayan Spanish.
To form the plural of words ending in a consonant, simply add -s to the end of the word. For words ending in -ey, remove the -ey and add -eys to make the plural form.
The plural is "donkeys."*Words ending in Y may change the Y to I and add ES.But except for the word money, the words ending in EY simply add an S.
guey