The plural form of syllabus is syllabior syllabuses.
The Latin plural is syllabi. But the English plural syllabuses is also used.
The plural of syllabus is syllabusses or syllabi
No, I can't answer this. Can anyone help me? I really need to pluralize the word "syllabus" in various examples and I don't know when to write "syllabi" and when to write syllabuses." Contact me at davidvmason@yahoo.com if you would. Thanks!
A syllabus is a classroom schedule. By studying the syllabus, I was able to determine what would be on the next test.
there is no such syllabus on net.............. keep searching..
The plural of syllabus is syllabi.
The plural form of "syllabus" is "syllabi."
The Latin plural is syllabi. But the English plural syllabuses is also used.
The plural forms syllabi and syllabuses are both correct.
The plural of syllabus is syllabusses or syllabi
Yes, the plural form for syllabus is syllabuses, the spelling "syllabi" is also accepted.
The noun 'syllabus' is the singular form. The plural forms are syllabi or syllabuses, both are accepted.
The Latin plural is syllabi. But the English plural syllabuses is also used.
The English plural form of "syllabus" is "syllabi" or "syllabuses." Both are considered correct, but "syllabi" is more commonly used in academic and formal contexts.
Some examples of nouns ending in -us that have plural forms ending in -era include "cactus" (plural: cacti), "focus" (plural: foci), and "syllabus" (plural: syllabi).
It seems to me that a syllabus gives the schedule of readings or lectures in a course of study, whereas a course outline provides the lecturer contact information, course description, assignments, textbook/reading list, policies, etc. I've had a professor for two years who was very adamant that a distinction be made between the two.
The Latin plural is syllabi, and the English plural is syllabuses.So the plural possessive may be syllabi's or syllabuses' (apostrophe only).Examples:The syllabi's exact nature would depend on the professors available for each course.The dean was in charge of the syllabuses' final forms.