On the problem of changing y to I plus es at the end of consonant letter plus y For example, why is the word baby babies? Why is it not babies? Baby a is a vowel. I don't understand that Thank you for your advice

On the problem of changing y to I plus es at the end of consonant letter plus y For example, why is the word baby babies? Why is it not babies? Baby a is a vowel. I don't understand that Thank you for your advice


If it's toy, then o is the vowel pronunciation letter, so add s directly



Change y to I at the end of consonant + y and add es, baby --- babies
I would like to ask. How can I see that this word ends with a consonant? Where is his consonant? There is another problem
When a proper noun ending in Y or a noun ending in vowel + y becomes plural, it is directly plural by adding s
monkey---monkeys holiday---holidays


monkey---monkeys holiday---holidays
Y has a vowel before it, e and a
B, like baby, is not a vowel letter, y becomes ies



Where does the consonant in the single three person end with y and change y to I and then add es?


The third person has he, she, it. The first verb after this word + the plural form. For example: he feels happy, feel is the prototype of the verb, feels. She was happy, was is the plural form of is. In fact, there are few verbs with y at the end, the main attention is to add es or S



The plural of nouns and the three simple of verbs


In the present tense, when the subject is the third person singular, the verb should use the "s" type (the third person singular form). 2. The formation of the so-called verb "s" type can be recorded according to the rule of changing nouns into plurals, that is, I) adding s directly at the end of the verb



How to judge whether a phrase is verb plus preposition or verb plus adverb


The judgment method is to look at the structure: Verb + (pronoun or noun) + adverb; verb + preposition + pronoun or noun, such as go on go over think over verb + (pronoun or noun) + adverb; verb + preposition + pronoun or noun Tom like writing with a pen.He ...



Who knows how to write "between, behind, next to"?


between /bi‘ twi:n/
behind /bi‘haind/
next to /nekst/ /tu:/
Is that it?



What do nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs, pronouns and prepositions mean?
Don't offer a reward first. Well written, I swear by my personality!


Adverbs modify verbs, adjectives or other adverbs, indicating the characteristics of action, state or the degree of a certain nature



The difference and usage of next, be bind, be side, next to
near


1. Near "in He sat in a chair near the door. He sat down beside Emma



What do the fixed collocations of prepositions act as in a sentence: preposition + noun, noun + preposition, verb + preposition, adjective + preposition


Preposition + noun:
He worked in that factory
The book is on the desk
The woman in a red coat is my love
Put it on the desk, please
The head word of "noun + preposition" is a noun. Its grammatical function is the same as that of a noun. It can act as subject, object, attribute, complement and so on
The grammatical function of "Verb + preposition" is the same as that of verb
The grammatical function of "Adjective + preposition" is the same as that of adjective



What's the difference between next and next to?
Please tell me more details. It's better to have examples
They all have The difference between the two is that they are close to each other


I will go to park next Sunday.
I am next to Mike.
Next means next
Next to
Please do not copy!