regular plural造句
例句與造句
- In the Spanish language, the official plural is the same as its regular plural " euros ".
- No other Germanic language has just one pattern of regular plural formation : Swedish have at least five ( or more, depending on definition ).
- The regular plural " pennies " fell out of use in England from the 16th century, except in reference to coins considered individually.
- It's mentioned as an exception to the " ies rule " in English plural # Regular plurals . talk ) 00 : 13, 25 August 2011 ( UTC)
- Depending on the word and the formalness of the setting, a regular plural in "-en " or "-s " can also be used.
- It's difficult to find regular plural in a sentence. 用regular plural造句挺難的
- "wife " is also found with the more regular plural . is sometimes found with the double plural . " parent, ancestor " is also found with the undoubled plural.
- As a general rule, brace of pheasant ", " Carruthers bagged a dozen tiger last year ", whereas in another context such as zoology or tourism the regular plural would be used.
- So the form used with " paucal " numbers is actually the regular plural ( stoli ); and with higher numbers you get the genitive plural ( stolov ) .-- talk ) 14 : 16, 13 August 2009 ( UTC)
- :: I think what happens, Jack, is that once you form an acronym such as this one, it takes on a life of its own, becomes a word in itself, with a regular singular KSC, and a regular plural KSCs.
- English sometimes distinguishes between regular plural forms of demonyms / ethnonyms ( e . g . " five Dutchmen ", " several Irishmen " ), and uncountable plurals used to refer to entire nationalities collectively ( e . g . " the Dutch ", " the Irish " ).
- :According to English plural # Regular plurals,-oes is in fact the default ( by implication for'native English'words ) when the word ends in consonant + o, but most foreign ( especially Italian ) loanwords as described under talk ) 21 : 10, 21 March 2011 ( UTC)
- Prior to 2006, the inter-institutional style guide recommended use of " euro " and " cent " without the plural " s ", and the translation style guide recommended use of invariant plurals ( without " s " ) when amending or referring to original legislation but use of regular plurals in documents intended for the general public.
- Sometimes e2 @ > F5 = B ( also romanized as'jevrocent'or'evrotsent') is used to distinguish euro-cents from the American cents . ( If 52 @ > had been treated as a regular neuter noun instead of being indeclinable, it would have the forms * 52 @ 0 ( regular plural or genitive singular ) and * 52 @ ( genitive plural ), but this treatment would have been unusual for a loanword .)
- If we also see what Lass says about the voicing in the regular plural suffix and the voicing in sets like " wolf-wolf's-wolves-wolves ", the " f " in " of " above could be ( 1 ) a printer's error, ( 2 ) a perceptual error by Hart, ( 3 ) variation in the voicing of weak syllables, or ( 4 ) a phonetic realization of voiced obstruents in word-final position similar to Modern English where by they become partially or mostly devoiced ( and Hart only had a simple dual voiced / voiceless distinction ).