Because "convey" is a VERB and verbs are conjugated and "conveyed" is the past participle.
In the word "conveyed," the y remains as y instead of changing to i because it is preceded by a vowel (e). When a word ends in a consonant + y and the suffix begins with a consonant, the y remains unchanged.
It depends on the situation. If the y is preceded by a consonant, it is usually changed to i before adding a suffix (e.g., happy becomes happiness). If the y is preceded by a vowel, you typically keep the y when adding a suffix (e.g., play becomes playing).
Double the final consonant before adding the suffix.
When adding the suffix "-ing" to the word "glide," you would drop the final "e" in "glide" before adding the suffix. This is because when adding a vowel suffix like "-ing" to a word ending in a silent "e," the "e" is typically dropped to maintain the original pronunciation of the word. Therefore, "glide" becomes "gliding" after dropping the final "e" before adding the suffix.
When adding a suffix to the word "continue," the correct rule is to drop the final "e" before adding the suffix.
In the word "conveyed," the y remains as y instead of changing to i because it is preceded by a vowel (e). When a word ends in a consonant + y and the suffix begins with a consonant, the y remains unchanged.
ummm....... marry-marries
It depends on the situation. If the y is preceded by a consonant, it is usually changed to i before adding a suffix (e.g., happy becomes happiness). If the y is preceded by a vowel, you typically keep the y when adding a suffix (e.g., play becomes playing).
Double the final consonant before adding the suffix.
When adding the suffix "-ing" to the word "glide," you would drop the final "e" in "glide" before adding the suffix. This is because when adding a vowel suffix like "-ing" to a word ending in a silent "e," the "e" is typically dropped to maintain the original pronunciation of the word. Therefore, "glide" becomes "gliding" after dropping the final "e" before adding the suffix.
marry - marries hurry - hurries carry - carries deny - denied
When adding a suffix to the word "continue," the correct rule is to drop the final "e" before adding the suffix.
By adding the suffix "-ously" to the word "riot," it becomes "riotously," which means in a wild, unrestrained, or noisy manner. The suffix changes the original word to describe the action in a more intense or exaggerated way.
The word regress can be changed by adding the affix "-ion", which is a suffix, to create regression.
When adding a suffix to a word ending in a consonant + Y, the Y usually changes to I before adding the suffix. For example, "happy" becomes "happier" and "study" becomes "studying".
The e is generally dropped from the end of the root word. For example, change + -ed is changed; change + ing is changing.
The word is spelled bluish. The "e" is dropped before adding the suffix "-ish".