You have to change the y to an I and add the es
The rule for forming the possessive case of nouns and indefinite pronouns is to add an apostrophe and the letter "s" ('s) to the noun or pronoun. For plural nouns ending in "s," you only need to add an apostrophe. Example: The cat's tail; the children's toys; someone's phone.
Yes, that is correct. The general rule is that nouns ending in a vowel followed by "y" form their plurals by simply adding an "s" to the singular form. For example, "valley" becomes "valleys" in the plural form.
For nouns that end in a consonant + 'y', you need to drop the final 'y' and add '-ies' to form the plural. For example:baby > babiesgallery > galleriescandy > candiesfly > fliesparty > parties
The correct form would be "Gates's" to show possession. It follows the standard rule for forming possessives for singular nouns ending in "s".
Most nouns ending in -o are pluralized by simply adding -s, except:Some nouns ending in the letter -oare pluralized by adding -es. These words must be memorized, because there is no simple rule to explain the differences.echo, echoeshero, heroespotato, potatoestorpedo, torpedoesveto, vetoes
The plural of "academy" is "academies." This follows the standard English rule of forming plurals by adding "s" or "es" to the end of the word, especially for nouns ending in "y" preceded by a consonant, where the "y" changes to "ies."
I don't think there is a rule, just that some nouns have identical forms: sheep, species, deer, aircraft are some examples.
The rule for forming the possessive case of nouns and indefinite pronouns is to add an apostrophe and the letter "s" ('s) to the noun or pronoun. For plural nouns ending in "s," you only need to add an apostrophe. Example: The cat's tail; the children's toys; someone's phone.
Yes, that is correct. The general rule is that nouns ending in a vowel followed by "y" form their plurals by simply adding an "s" to the singular form. For example, "valley" becomes "valleys" in the plural form.
For nouns that end in a consonant + 'y', you need to drop the final 'y' and add '-ies' to form the plural. For example:baby > babiesgallery > galleriescandy > candiesfly > fliesparty > parties
Unfortunately there is no simple rules for using 's' or 'es' to change nouns ending in 'o' into the plural form.Examples of nouns ending in 'o' that add 'es' to form the plural are:echoesheroesmosquitoespotatoestomatoestorpedoesvetoes
It says in the rule of forming singular noun to plural add "S" to nouns ending in "O" preceeded by a vowel .
The regular plural form of a noun adds (s) or (es) to the singular noun.
The plural of "Douglass" is "Douglasses." When forming the plural of proper nouns ending in "s," you typically add "es," following the general rule for pluralization in English.
Nouns are made plural by adding -s or -es to form the plural, they are called regular plurals; nouns using another form for the plural are called irregular plurals. Some examples of irregular plurals are:child- childrenwoman- womentooth- teethmouse- miceknife- knivesoasis- oasesgoose- geesecactus- cacti
The plural of receipt is receipts. This follows the general rule for forming plurals, which is simply to add an "s" at the end.
The plural of bunch is bunches.The rule for making singular nouns ending with -sh, -ch, -s, -x or -z into plurals is to add -es.Examples:wish, wisheschurch, churchesbus, busesfox, foxesbuzz, buzzes