because fly has a consonant before the y and boy has a vowel
Nouns ending in -y, preceded by a vowel are made plural by adding an -s. Examples: boys, toys, clays, trays Nouns ending in -y, preceded by a consonant are made plural by dropping the -y and adding -ies. Examples: babies, ladies, parties, armies.
Use an ''s' when you are indicating possession. Use 'ies' when you are indicating plurality.
Generally speaking, any word ending with a vowel and a yends simply with an s - apart from those words which end with the letters uy.
No, a possessive noun is formed by adding an -'s (or just an -' to the end of plural nouns already ending in -s) to the existing singular or plural noun; for example:singular=apple, singular possessive=apple's; plural=apples, plural possessive= apples'singular=boy, singular possessive=boy's; plural=boys, plural possessive=boys'singular=car, singular possessive=car's; plural=cars, plural possessive=cars'The nouns that drop the -y and add -ies is to form the plural are nouns ending in -y preceded by a consonant; for example:singular=ally; plural=allies (singular possessive=ally's; plural possessive=allies')singular=baby; plural=babies (singular possessive=baby's; plural possessive=babies')singular=city; plural=cities(singular possessive=city's; plural possessive=cities')
Valleys ... because if the noun ends in y + a,e,i,o,u ( a vowel letter) as in boy (y+o) you do not cross out the y and add ies, you only add (s): boy+boys.... day =days, BUT if the noun ends in y+ a consonant letter (b,c,d....), we cross the (y) and add "ies", as in baby=babies... lady=ladies
The flies are sitting on the ceiling. The babiesare crying.Adding -ies to a word is a way of making plural nouns. Some nouns you just add an -s to make the plural -- boy - boys. Some nouns you add -es -- box boxes. Words that end in -y change, the y changes to i then you add es -- fly - flies, baby - babies
Nouns ending in -y, preceded by a vowel are made plural by adding an -s. Examples: boys, toys, clays, trays Nouns ending in -y, preceded by a consonant are made plural by dropping the -y and adding -ies. Examples: babies, ladies, parties, armies.
Use an ''s' when you are indicating possession. Use 'ies' when you are indicating plurality.
Just s, es, if there is y then remove Y and add ies after it
Its Rocky with a 'y' not 'ie', 'ie' is plural but you just have to add the 's': 'ies'; Rockies-(plural) Rocky- (normal not plural)
The spelling rule is: when the word has a vowel (a, e, i, o, u) before the letter ‘y’, you add the letter ‘s’ and when the word has a consonant (b, c, d, f, g, h, j, k, l, m, n, p, q, r, s, t, v, w, x, y, z) before the letter ‘y’, you remove the ‘y’ and replace it with ‘ies’.
The plural possessive is boys'.When the plural ends in 's' you simply add an apostrophe.Example: The boys' gym is at the end of this corridor.
You don't drop the 'y' you just add 's' to make the plural monkeys.
Generally speaking, any word ending with a vowel and a yends simply with an s - apart from those words which end with the letters uy.
No, a possessive noun is formed by adding an -'s (or just an -' to the end of plural nouns already ending in -s) to the existing singular or plural noun; for example:singular=apple, singular possessive=apple's; plural=apples, plural possessive= apples'singular=boy, singular possessive=boy's; plural=boys, plural possessive=boys'singular=car, singular possessive=car's; plural=cars, plural possessive=cars'The nouns that drop the -y and add -ies is to form the plural are nouns ending in -y preceded by a consonant; for example:singular=ally; plural=allies (singular possessive=ally's; plural possessive=allies')singular=baby; plural=babies (singular possessive=baby's; plural possessive=babies')singular=city; plural=cities(singular possessive=city's; plural possessive=cities')
Valleys ... because if the noun ends in y + a,e,i,o,u ( a vowel letter) as in boy (y+o) you do not cross out the y and add ies, you only add (s): boy+boys.... day =days, BUT if the noun ends in y+ a consonant letter (b,c,d....), we cross the (y) and add "ies", as in baby=babies... lady=ladies
A plural (noun) in a sentence is simply a word for two or more people, places, or things.A plural possessive (noun) is a word for two or more people, places, or things that indicate that something in the sentence belongs to that noun.A plural possessive noun is indicated by an apostrophe at the end of a plural noun ending with an s (s'), or an apostrophe s ('s) at the end of a plural noun that doesn't end with s.Examples:The boys went to the locker room. (plural noun: boys)They went to the boys' locker room. (plural possessive noun: boys')