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Spelling of Plural noun /vs/ the Third-person-singular verb inflection.

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Digger36  #435715  Sat, 27 Oct 07 11:20 PM
Hello:

The USUAL rule for forming plural nouns is to add an "S".
There are reasonably well-established rules for forming plural nouns in special cases.

The USUAL rule for 3-rd Pers Sing verbs is to add an "S".
Q. What, if any, are the rules for forming 3-rd Pers Sinig verbs in special cases.
     Are they the same as for the plural noun?
This is of especial concern when the same word may be either a noun or a verb.

My question deals with the Plural noun /vs/ the Third-person-singular verb inflection.

The USUAL plural ...
   one book         two bookS
   one lift            two liftS
The USUAL inflection on the 3-rd person singular..
    I        lift      We   lift
    You    lift      You  lift
    He     liftS     They lift

The SPECIAL cases of plurals may be exemplified as .
   one  try          two  tries  (as with attempts)
   one  carry       two carries  (as with tooth cavities)
   one  empty     two empties  (as with bottles)
   one  finish      two finishes  (as with paints)
   one  fly          two flies    (as with insects)
   one  loaf         two loaves   (as with bread)

But what about the SPECIAL cases of the inflection on the 3-rd person singular;
      it seems less obvious, as in these cases  ..
    he  destroys / destroies         sand dunes
    he  trys / tries                  jumping high
    he  carrys / carries            the load
    he  emptys / empties        the glass of milk
    he  finishs / finishes         the  task
    he  flys / flies                  the airplane
    he  loafs / ???                  on the couch
  would appreciate reasoned choices in the above and some rule(s).

Thanks,,
  
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Marius Hancu  #435725  Sun, 28 Oct 07 12:38 AM
See (for nouns)
Special cases
on this page at this grammar site:

http://grammar.ccc.commnet.edu/grammar/plurals.htm



  
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Loojka  #435734  Sun, 28 Oct 07 01:42 AM
 Digger36 wrote:


But what about the SPECIAL cases of the inflection on the 3-rd person singular;
      it seems less obvious, as in these cases  ..
    he  destroys / destroies         sand dunes
    he  trys / tries                  jumping high
    he  carrys / carries            the load
    he  emptys / empties        the glass of milk
    he  finishs / finishes         the  task
    he  flys / flies                  the airplane
    he  loafs / loaves                on the couch
  would appreciate reasoned choices in the above and some rule(s).

Thanks,,


Change y into ie only when it ("y") is preceded by a consonant.
Add es when a word ends in s, sh, ch, x or o.
  
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CalifJim  #435816  Sun, 28 Oct 07 07:07 AM
All the rules for adding S are the same for plurals as for third-person singular present tense verbs, including the words that end in y.

That said, there are a few exceptions that you will encounter from time to time, for example, words that end in f or fe.  There are so few that you can just make a mental note of them when you encounter them.

Noun:  loaf, loaves
Verb:  loaf, loafs
Noun: knife, knives
Verb: knife, knifes

CJ

  
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