you add a s when it is pularl
No, you add -es instead of -s Example: bosses
no way!
According to Kate Turabian's A Manual for Writers, letters used as terms do not require an article. (22.2.2)Correct: "Add s to make the the word plural."Incorrect: "Add an s to make the word plural."Incorrect: "Add a s to make the word plural."
According to Kate Turabian's A Manual for Writers, letters used as terms do not require an article. (22.2.2)Correct: "Add s to make the the word plural."Incorrect: "Add an s to make the word plural."Incorrect: "Add a s to make the word plural."
One word would be "prince". Add an -s and you have the plural - "princes". Add another -s and you have "princess", a word in singular form.
If you add l you get flavour, but if you add s you get favours.
add an 's' to the end of the word
You can if the word you build contains the "S" you added.
To make the word 'request' (as a noun) into its plural form, add 's' at the end of the word: requests.
r&t: revert s&s: severs l&s: levers
To make a word ending in a vowel plural, simply add -s to the end of the word. For example, "cat" becomes "cats" in plural form.
Yes.