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English Grammar OLD draft

1. Singular and plural

  • Introduction

  • 1. Singular and plural
  • 2. Articles
  • 3. Capital letters
  • 4. Possessive
  • 5. Present simple, third person
  • 6. Present continuous
  • 7. Personal pronouns as objects
  • 8. Can, could and be able to
  • 9. Must and have to
  • 10. Dummy subject
  • Introduction

  • 1. Singular and plural

  • 2. Articles

  • 3. Capital letters

  • 4. Possessive

  • 5. Present simple, third person

  • 6. Present continuous

  • 7. Personal pronouns as objects

  • 8. Can, could and be able to

  • 9. Must and have to

  • 10. Dummy subject

1. Singular and plural

In English, the most common way to express that there is more than one of something is the noun suffix -s:

banana – bananas
dog – dogs

Depending on the last letter of the word, the plural suffix can also be -es, -ies or -ves:

box – boxes
family – families
life – lives

There are also words that have an irregular plural. For example, a vowel might change, the word might get the ending -en, or there might be two different plurals for different meanings. These are exceptions and must be learned by heart:

tooth – teeth
child – children
penny – pennies/pence

Some words are always in the singular: money, advice, furniture

Some other words are always in the plural: looks, manners, customs

Pay special attention to words that are plural in your first language but singular in English:

homework, not homeworks
wedding, not weddings

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