Circle the correct plural noun for each singular noun.
1. penny pennys pennies penknives
2. scarf scarves scarfs scarvies
3. dish dishies dishs dishes
4. peach peachies peaches peachs
5. calf calfs calfes calves cherries cherrys cherryes
6. cherry
7. wish wishs wishes wishies pouchs pouchies pouches
8. pouch
9. wolf wolfs wolves wolfes
10. fox foxies foxes foxs
11. berry berrys berryies berries
12. shelf shelves shelfs shelfies
13. box boxies boxs boxes bunnies bunnys bunnyies
14. bunny
15. peach peachs peachies peache
The correct answer and explanation is :
Let’s go through each singular noun and find the correct plural form:
- Penny → Pennies
The plural of “penny” is pennies. When forming the plural of nouns ending in “y” preceded by a consonant, we typically change the “y” to “ies” (e.g., penny → pennies). - Scarf → Scarves
The plural of “scarf” is scarves. Nouns that end in “f” or “fe” often change to “ves” in the plural form (e.g., scarf → scarves). - Dish → Dishes
The plural of “dish” is dishes. For nouns ending in “sh,” “ch,” or “x,” we add “es” to form the plural (e.g., dish → dishes). - Peach → Peaches
The plural of “peach” is peaches. Like “dish,” we add “es” after a consonant ending to form the plural (peach → peaches). - Calf → Calves
The plural of “calf” is calves. Nouns ending in “f” or “fe” are often pluralized by changing “f” to “ves” (e.g., calf → calves).
Cherry → Cherries
The plural of “cherry” is cherries. When a noun ends in “y” preceded by a consonant, the “y” is replaced with “ies” in the plural form (e.g., cherry → cherries). - Cherry → Cherries (already answered above).
- Wish → Wishes
The plural of “wish” is wishes. For nouns ending in “sh,” “ch,” or “x,” we add “es” to form the plural (wish → wishes).
Pouch → Pouches
The plural of “pouch” is pouches. Like “wish,” “pouch” ends in “ch,” and we add “es” for the plural (pouch → pouches). - Pouch → Pouches (already answered above).
- Wolf → Wolves
The plural of “wolf” is wolves. Nouns that end in “f” are typically pluralized by changing the “f” to “ves” (wolf → wolves). - Fox → Foxes
The plural of “fox” is foxes. For nouns that end in “x,” we add “es” to form the plural (fox → foxes). - Berry → Berries
The plural of “berry” is berries. Like “penny,” “berry” ends in “y” preceded by a consonant, so we change the “y” to “ies” (berry → berries). - Shelf → Shelves
The plural of “shelf” is shelves. Nouns that end in “f” or “fe” are often pluralized by changing “f” to “ves” (shelf → shelves). - Box → Boxes
The plural of “box” is boxes. For nouns ending in “x,” we add “es” to form the plural (box → boxes).
Bunny → Bunnies
The plural of “bunny” is bunnies. Like “penny” and “berry,” “bunny” ends in “y” preceded by a consonant, so we change the “y” to “ies” (bunny → bunnies). - Bunny → Bunnies (already answered above).
- Peach → Peaches (already answered above).
Explanation:
To form the plural of most English nouns, we follow regular rules based on the last letter or letters of the noun. In this exercise, we covered some common pluralization rules:
- For most nouns ending in a consonant + y, we change the “y” to ies (e.g., penny → pennies, berry → berries).
- Nouns ending in f or fe typically change the “f” to ves in the plural form (e.g., calf → calves, shelf → shelves).
- Nouns ending in sh, ch, or x add es to form the plural (e.g., dish → dishes, box → boxes, fox → foxes, wish → wishes).
- Some nouns ending in f or fe also change to ves (e.g., wolf → wolves, scarf → scarves).
These rules help form the correct plural and make English grammar more predictable when handling nouns of different structures.