Make the following words plural 1、this friend_______ 2、my brother_______ 3、grandparent_____ 4、her unle_____ 5、my aunt______

Make the following words plural 1、this friend_______ 2、my brother_______ 3、grandparent_____ 4、her unle_____ 5、my aunt______

these friends
my brothers
grandparents
her unles
my aunts
Words from singular to plural
Each of the five rules requires 40 words
1. English nouns have the difference between the singular and the plural. The singular means "one" and the plural means "more than one." nouns change from the singular to the plural, most of which are regular changes, and directly add - s, for example: Book → books, girl → girls. But nouns ending with - s, - Z, - x, - CH, - SH, when they become complex, add - es, for example: bus → buses, buzz → buzzes, box → boxes, watch → watches, The song formula: ① half of the leaves are yellow, the wife takes a knife to cut the grain, and a wolf comes out from behind the shelf, just like a robber running for his life. ② the wife takes a knife to kill the wolf, and the thief is scared to death, hiding behind the shelf to protect his life, and half a leaf covers his eyes, Shelf, wolf, thief and life, when these nouns become plural, we should change - f (E) to V, and then add - es.3. The ending noun of - f directly adds - s to become plural. The song formula: by the Bay and on the roof, the leader and the servant look at each other; who says they have no faith, the evidence is written on the handkerchief. For example: Gulf, roof, chief, serf, belief, proof, handkerchief, These nouns become plural and add - s directly. Note: scar (scarf; CAPE) can be changed from F to VE and then - s, or - s can be added directly. For nouns ending with consonant letter + y, change y to I and add - es. for example: baby → babies, country → countries, family → families; when - y is a vowel, add - s directly, For example: Radio → radio, piano → pianos, kangaroo → kangaroos; some need to add - es. in middle school textbooks, there are several such words, which can be remembered through a formula: Negro heroes love tomatoes and potatoes, namely Negro → Negroes, hero → heroes, tomato → tomato, Some nouns ending with O can be added with either - s or - es. for example: Volcano → volcano / volcano, etc. 6. Irregular changes of plural nouns need special memory. For example: man → men, woman → women, goose → geese, foot → feet, tooth → tea, mouse → mice, louse (lice), child → children, fish → fish, deer 7. In junior high school textbooks, the plural forms of nouns expressing "a Chinese" can be memorized through the formula: Chinese and Japan remain unchanged, English and French change, and the rest - s is followed by the following. For example: Chinese → Chinese, Japanese → Japanese; English → English, Englishwoman → Englishwomen, Frenchman → Frenchmen, Frenchwoman → Frenchwomen; American → Americans, 8. Uncountable nouns generally only have singular form, not plural form. Some uncountable nouns can express a certain amount with the help of unit words. For example: a cup of tea, two pieces of paper, The plural form of a news noun usually adds - s or - es after the singular. The pronunciation of S is as follows: 1. After the clear consonant (vocal cord does not vibrate when pronouncing, such as: [k] [S] [F] [P] [t]), s pronounces [s], such as: desks maps, books, dislike; 2. After the voiced consonant (vocal cord should vibrate when pronouncing, such as: [g] [Z] [v] [b] [D]) and vowel, s pronounces [Z], such as pigs, jobs workers, trees, For example, cats is [TS], [DZ], [DZ], [DZ], [DZ], [DZ], [DZ], [DZ] is the same as s in general, and its pronunciation is / s, Z / 1.lamps, cakes, months, 2.animals, flags, planes; banans, brothers, eyes, knees, radios, 3.aunts, dates; cars, friends, 4.boxes, glasses, If the singular noun ends with a voiced consonant or a vowel, then - s, - ES / Z /; if the singular noun ends with / T / or / D /, then - S /; if the singular noun ends with a voiced consonant or a vowel, then - s, - ES / Z /; if the singular noun ends with / T / or / D /, then, After adding - s or - es at the end of a plural noun, it should be read as / TS / or / DZ / together with / T /, / D /; if the singular noun ends with five consonant phonemes / S /, / Z /, / /, / T /, / D /, the - s, - ES / iz /; we know that when a singular noun ending with - f or - Fe becomes a plural noun, it often changes - f or - Fe into - VES, in which - VES reads / VZ /
Is the plural of a compound word composed of two nouns plural?
The plural form of a compound word composed of two nouns, two nouns only need to change the head word into plural, but if it is a compound word composed of man and woman, both of them need to change into plural. For example: a man doctor -- two men doctors. A girl student --- two girl students
Why is each a subject predicate verb in the plural instead of a verb each.and The predicate verb is singular
Is it a fixed usage
They each have a new book. The subject is they, and each is the appositive of the subject each.and It is a principle of subject predicate agreement that predicate verbs are singular
The question is very strange.. Each is usually singular.. Pro, you'd better make a copy of the topic you saw originally, otherwise no one can explain it clearly.
Each is a determiner. It is used before a singular noun.
Each of can be followed by a plural noun
It is known that the derivative function of F (x) defined on R is f '(x), which satisfies f' (x) > F (x), then when a > 0, the magnitude of F (a) and e ^ AF (0)
Let g (x) = e ^ {- x) * f (x)
G '(x) = e ^ {- x} * [f (x) - f' (x)] < 0, so g (x) is a decreasing function
When a > = 0,
g(a)
Is the predicate verb after every singular or plural
Every can't be the subject alone
Everyone, everything as the subject, predicate with the singular
Everday can only be used as adverbial
singular
singular
If the derivative function f '(x) of the function f (x) defined on R satisfies f' (x) > F (x), then the relationship between F (2011) and f (2009) e ^ 2 is the same
Let f (x) = e ^ (- x) f (x), then f '(x) = e ^ (- x) f' (x) - e ^ (- x) f (x) > 0, so f (x) increases monotonically, then
F (2011) > F (2009), i.e
e^(-2011)f(2011)>e^(-2009)f(2099),
So f (2011) > F (2009) e ^ 2
In this paper, we consider f (x) e ^ (- x) deriving from X, and obtain that (f '(x) - f (x)) e ^ (- x) is always greater than zero (because f' (x) > F (x))
For the above integral, from 2009 to 2011, of course, the result is greater than 0
That is, f (2011) e ^ (- 2011) - f (2009) e ^ (- 2009) = e ^ (- 2011) (f (2011) - f (2009) e ^ 2) > 0
So f (2011) > F (2009) e ^ 2
We each followed by plural or singular, each of us followed by singular,
Each of us is singular because each is the subject
We each is followed by a plural verb because we are the subject
If f (x) (x ∈ R) satisfies f ′ (x) > F (x), then when a > 0, the relation between F (a) and EAF (0) is ()
A. f(a)<eaf(0)B. f(a)>eaf(0)C. f(a)=eaf(0)D. f(a)≤eaf(0)
Let f (x) = E2x, then f '(x) = 2 · E2x, obviously satisfy f' (x) > F (x), f (a) = E2A, EAF (0) = EA, when a > 0, obviously & nbsp; & nbsp; E2A > EA, that is, f (a) > EAF (0), so choose B
When we each is the subject, is the predicate singular or plural
Each is the appositive of we, so the subject is we and the predicate verb is plural
singular