A few include: exclude- exclusion, intrude- intrusion, invade- invasion, erode- erosion, conclude- conclusion, allude- allusion, decide- decision
Some examples of words that drop the "e" and add "ous" to form their adjectival form include: Pain → Painous Courage → Courageous Advantage → Advantageous
reputable resumable undesirable excusable reusable confusable opposable pleasurable unnamable consumable
danced, hoped, closed, typed, opened, pulled, tied.
Some examples of words where adding a silent "e" makes the vowel long are "hope," "save," and "slide."
There are no specific rules to be followed for words ending in "ely". Most of the root words ending in E add -ly whereas words ending in Y replace the Y with an I before adding the -ly. Examples: complete => completely icy => icily hungry => hungrily
Some examples of words that drop the "e" and add "ous" to form their adjectival form include: Pain → Painous Courage → Courageous Advantage → Advantageous
slime is a word where you can add y because to make slimy drop the e and add y to make it slimy
add the suffix
This is a very common English pattern: bake>baking, for example.
reputable resumable undesirable excusable reusable confusable opposable pleasurable unnamable consumable
Most of the suffixes that you might use, such as -ing and -ion start with vowels. In that case , you would drop the e at the end of the word. For example, populating or population.
-ion. Drop the e, and integrate becomes integration.
It derives from the word equate, a verb, and the noun form you add -ion to the end so equate+ion-e=equation
Flies. You drop the "y" and add "i-e-s"
You can add either an E or an A after the E to get a long E sound. The words beet and beatare homophones (sound-alike words).
The noun forms of the verb to indicate are indicator, indication, and the gerund, indicating.The suffixes are: -or, -tion, and -ing.
you drop it