1) By purely reading the word, how could I tell it has plural or not?
2) By purely reading the word, how could I tell it should add 'er' and 'est'
behind, or put 'more' and 'the most' in front?
Thanks
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1) By purely reading the word, how could I tell it has plural or not?
2) By purely reading the word, how could I tell it should add 'er' and 'est'
behind, or put 'more' and 'the most' in front?
Thanks
What's the word?
I'll leave this to the 'masters'
Hi
1. One cannot state if a noun is singular or plural without placing it in a context.
e.g. The sheep is grazing in the field [singular]
The sheep are grazing in the field. [plural]
The noun "sheep"- among many others- is considered to have a "zero plural" from this point of view.
"Plurals are formed by adding -s, except the following cases:
When a word ends in -ch, -s, -sh, -ss or -x the plural is formed by adding -es
eg.: benches, gases, dishes, crosses, taxes
When a word ends in -y preceded by a consonant the plural form is -ies
eg.: parties, bodies, policies
When a word ends in -y preceded by a vowel the plural is formed by adding -s
eg.: trays, joys, keys
When a word ends in -o the more common plural ending is -oes
eg.: tomatoes, potatoes, zeroes, heroes
In less familiar words or when the final -o preceded by a vowel the plural ending is -os
eg.: avocados, armadillos, studios, cameos
When a word ends in -f the plural is formed either by adding -s
eg.: beliefs, cuffs, whiffs
or by changing the -f to -v and adding -es, eg.: wives, thieves, loves.
Some words may take both forms, eg.: scarf, wharf
In the cases where both endings can be used, the -ves ending is usually the more formal one. The -s ending is more "casual" and is a bit more of a "slang" form.
When a word ends in -ex or -ix the more formal plural ending is -ices. In more general contexts -es is used
eg.: appendices, appendixes, indices, indexes
When a word form Latin ends in -is the plural form is -es
eg.: egcrises, analyses
When a word form Latin ends in -us the plural form is -i
eg.: succubi, nuclei, syllabi, radii
exception: viruses
With compound words (like court-martial) it is usually the most important part which is pluralized
eg.: courts-martial, lord-justices, mothers-in-law
In certain cases the plural form of a word is the same as the singular
eg.: deer, sheep, grouse and in some words both forms end in -s
eg.: measles, corps, mews
There are two main types of plural which take either singular of plural verbs:
words like media and data. These are in common use as singular nouns although, strictly, this is incorrect
words ending in -ics. Generally, these are treated as plural when the word relates to an individual person or thing
eg.: his mathematics are poor, the hall's acoustics are good
and as singular when it is regarded more strictly as a science
eg.: mathematics is an important subject."
PLURALS OF ENGLISH NOUNS
Plural - English Grammar
Spelling: Noun Plurals
This is a very large topic and it takes too much time to discuss it on the forum
2. English adjectives made up of one syllable add -er [comparative] and -est [superlative].
hot - hottest - the hottest
thin- thinner - the thinnest
busy - busier - the busiest
There are some exceptions as well :
clever [two syllables] - cleverer - the cleverest
narrow - narrower - the narrowest
The morphemes "more" and " most" are added to the adjectives made up of two or more syllables:
difficult- more difficult - the most difficult
beautiful -more beautiful - the most beautiful
This is also a very large topic which requires a deeper study.
Regards
Excellent reply teia.:up:
Hi Curmudgeon
Thank you very much. I am aware of the fact that my examples cannot be of too much help [especially for a beginner] because such large topics as English noun and adjective should be discussed step by step due to the complexity they involve: spelling, pronounciation,form, etc.
Best wishes
Ye I agree it is a vast area and needs to be taken step by step.
I do enjoy your contributions though, as they are as comprehensive as any I have seen on here.
Best wishes:-)