The plural of asterisk is formed by simply adding an s to form asterisks.
To understand irregular nouns, you need to know what a regular noun is. A regular noun is a noun that forms its plural by adding an 's' or an 'es' to the end of the word. An irregular nounis a noun that forms its plural in some other way.The noun 'criterion' forms its plural in the old Greek way: one criterion, two criteria.Other examples are phenomenon-phenomema, medium-media, or curriculum-curricula.
Asterisk is dervied from the greek word "asteri", which means star. That is why the asterisk is star shaped.
() is not an asterisk. It is a pair of rounded brackets called parentheses. An asterisk is this symbol *.Asterisk comes from the Latin word "asteriscus" and and the Ancient Greek word "asteriskos" which means "little star". It is called this because an asterisk resembles a typical star.
The irregular plural form of the word "crisis" is "crises." This change occurs because "crisis" is a Greek-derived noun that follows a different pattern of pluralization, replacing the "-is" ending with "-es." Thus, one crisis becomes multiple crises.
The word that means star shaped mark in Greek is "asterisk." It comes from the Greek word "asteriskos," which means little star.
It is called as asterisk or star. From the Greek word asteriskos- meaning small star.
Asterisk. Aster.
The English plural is carcinomas. The Greek/Latin plural would be carcinomata.
The plural form of the proper noun Greek is Greeks.The plural possessive form is Greeks'.Example: The Greeks' jerseys are blue and white.
The plural form of the Greek word polis is poleis.
The Greek/Latin plural is carcinomata, the common English plural is carcinomas.
The singular form of criteria, "criterion," is considered irregular because it deviates from the typical pattern of pluralizing nouns by adding an "-s" or "-es" ending. Its uniqueness is due to its historical evolution from Greek rather than Latin, which is the source of many English plural forms.