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esses查看 esses 在百度字典中的解释百度英翻中〔查看〕
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  • How do I express the plural of a letter in writing?
    My last name has two occurrences of the letter "s" in it, so in speech I tell people all the time that it's spelled "with two esses" However I don't know how to express such a thing in writing
  • Plural of The Letter S - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    2 You can avoid the confusion by pluralizing the name of the letter, ess, into esses She spent the afternoon ignoring the professor and drawing idly in her notebook, languidly doodling esses and then turning them into dragons
  • Where did Pew! Pew! come from? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    To elaborate, I'm talking about the "sound effect" that people often make when imitating gunfire Eg "Pew! Pew! I shot you Billy, you're dead now!" I suppose this developed from the "Bang! Bang
  • Focussed or focused? Rules for doubling the last consonant when . . .
    When you put the 2 ‘esses’ in - ie ‘focussed’ - the double ‘s’ ‘protects’ the ‘u’, and keeps it sounding soft, like the ‘u’ in ‘us’ This applies to many words and is really why we have double consonants in English The double consonant is there to tell you how to pronounce the word Examples:
  • (s) or s at the end of a word to denote one or many
    I like to use less- greater- than brackets, "<s>", which is more similar to parentheses than separation with a forward-slash, and has added benefit of making easier to parse with more clear distinction in cases of more different pluralizations than required by simply adding an ‘s’ or ‘es’ (e g also eliminating something, like ‘-us’ to ‘-i’)
  • Through vs throughout. - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Through means going in or starting at one side and coming out or stopping at the other side of: a path through the wood Throughout means in every part of (a place or object) There is a good deal of overlap, and either would be appropriate in many circumstances Through often has a sense of one end to the other, while throughout suggests into every corner The latter gives a feeling of being
  • verbs - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    What is the correct way to pluralize an acronym? asked about pluralising acronyms, abbreviations and initialisms, but is there a standard way to add verb endings e g -ing and -ed (what are these c
  • Pssst! (Usage as a verb) [duplicate] - English Language Usage Stack . . .
    If you are in a quiet place and someone wants to get your attention by making the 'psst!' noise, how would you write this? Does the following work? "She heard a soft 'psst!' from somewhere in
  • Entry(s) or Entrie(s)? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    Sometimes you come across this format suggesting 'one or more', in not as many words, like "Please select the book(s) you wish to loan" But what happens in that case of plurals that don't follow the
  • Dickens or Dickenss? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    This is a matter of style; there is no single right or wrong answer, and it is not dependent primarily on locale AP style, American, dictates Dickens' APA style, also American, dictates Dickens's And CMOS, again American, prefers DIckens's but has no objection to Dickens' Of related interest: When did it become correct to add an “s” to a singular possessive already ending in “‑s





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