When the word angry is changed into the adverb angrily, the y in angry becomes an i; the applicable rule is that when you add a suffix onto a word that ends in y, you change the y to an i.
pony tally vanity, grocery, humanity pinny penny ponies tallies vanities groceries humanities pinnies pennies
the rule is when there is 'sh' in some words we cant use s
Change the y to an i and add -es.
The word clear changes to clearness because you just add ness to the word
it is the rule of a noun.
Change the y to an i and add es.
The double consonant rule applies when a word end with a short vowel plus a consonant. For example, the word swim would become swimming.
Not always, but many times the spelling does get changed. You can figure this out with simple examples: Ex1. play+ed = played (but) dirty+ed = dirtied (rule: change the "y" to "i" and add "ed") Ex2. thank+full = thankful (but) beauty+full = beautiful (rule: when adding "full" to a base word, always take out one "l" from the suffix "full" Ex3. read+ing = reading (but) excite+ing = exciting ( Ex4. love+able = lovable (rule: when a base word ends with an "e", add a y or a suffix that starts with a vowel) understand+able = understandable
The prefix you would add to the word "marked" to change the meaning to "mark before" is "pre-". So it becomes "pre-marked."
The rule for plural possessive is to add an apostrophe after the ‘s’ when a plural noun ends in ‘s’, such as “The students’ books.” If a plural noun does not end in ‘s’, add an apostrophe followed by ‘s’, like “The children’s toys.”
No