Plural Nouns With S. To make the plural form of a noun, we add -s. A plural noun is a word that indicates that there is more than one person, animal place, thing, or idea.
In kindergarten, children practice forming regular plural nouns orally by adding /s/ or /es/ to familiar common nouns (e.g., dog, dogs; wish, wishes). For ad-free videos and other content visit www.rockinenglishlessons.com Musical English lesson for learning how to use regular plural nouns and the suffix (-. Nouns like this include: trousers, jeans, glasses, savings, thanks, steps, stairs, customs, congratulations, tropics, wages, spectacles, outskirts, goods, wits Four exercises for practicing the use of regular and irregular plurals of noun s. key is included.
The main types of noun that do this are: Nouns ending in -y Enjoy using this freebie to practice adding s or es when forming plural nouns.
We look at: - Regular nouns adding -S to the end. - Nouns ending in S, CH, SH.
This lesson discusses the variety of ways in which English plural nouns are formed from the corresponding singular forms, as well as various issues concerning the usage of singulars and. The most basic rule is to pluralize a noun by adding the suffix -s (as in voters); however, if the noun ends in -s, -x, -z, -sh, or -ch (with the exception—see, we already have an exception—of words ending in -ch pronounced with a hard k, like monarchs and stomachs), the suffix -es is added in order to create an extra syllable to pronounce the plural—as in goddesses, anticlimaxes. For instance, city becomes cities, and baby becomes babies.