
- •7. Different ways of expressing future time.
- •16. What is the difference in presentation of the event by the constructions “used to do” and “would do”?
- •17. The difference between “gone (to)” and “been (to)”?
- •20. Direct and indirect speech.
- •25. Irregular plural nouns.
- •38. Comparative construction.
- •39. Substantivized adjectives.
- •40. Irregular forms of the degrees of comparison of adjectives.
- •41. Adjectives after verbs.
- •47. Word order – adverbs with a verb.
- •48. Semantic groups of pronouns.
- •49. Number and case forms of pronouns.
- •50. Forms of “other”.
- •51. Expressions of quantity.
- •56. What may prepositions indicate?
- •58. How can prepositions be classified in accordance with their structure?
- •63. “For, during and while” – grammatical difference.
- •79. Usage of articles with the names of countries, mountains, islands.
- •80. Usage of articles with the names of oceans, seas, rivers, lakes.
- •1.2.2. Voice
- •1.2.3. Aspect
- •85. Infinitive constructions. Complex Subject. Complex Object. For – Construction.
- •1. The objective with the infinitive construction
- •1) The subject
- •87. What is Gerund? How to distinguish it from the Participle 1 and the Verbal Noun? How to translate the Gerund into Russian?
- •88. What is the Participle 1? How to translate it into Russian?
- •89. What is the Participle 2? The functions of the Participle 2 in the sentence?
- •1. Attribute.
- •2. Adverbial Modifier
- •3. Predicative
- •90. Parenthesis. Dangling or Misrelated Participle.
- •91. Constructions with the Participle
- •92. Gerundial Constructions
- •93. The Infinitive. The syntactical and morphological features of the Infinitive.
- •II. The morphological features of the infinitive (The forms of the infinitive)
- •97. What verbals can be used as subject or object?
- •98. What are the verbs which can be followed by –ing or to with a difference of meaning?
25. Irregular plural nouns.
Simple (one-stem) nouns:
ending in sibilants
-es
box—boxes, voice—voices, glass—glasses, bridge-bridges, watch—watches, bush—bushes, fish—fishes
ending in -y
-ys
day—days, journey—journeys, key—keys, boy—boys
-ies
city—cities, country—countries, penny—pennies, fly-flies, army—armies, lady—ladies
c) ending in -o
-os
cuckoo—cuckoos, piano—pianos, photo—photos, solo—solos, zero—zeros, portfolio—portfolios, soprano—sopranos, ratio—ratios, dynamo—dynamos
-oes
hero—heroes, echo—echoes, embargo—embargoes, Negro—Negroes, potato—potatoes, tomato—tomatoes, veto—vetoes
d) ending in -f, -fe, -fs, -fes
cliff—cliffs, belief—beliefs, chief—chiefs, proof-proofs, roof—roofs, safe—safes
-ves
calf—calves, half—halves, knife—knives, leaf—leaves, life—lives, loaf—loaves, self—selves, sheaf—sheaves, shelf—shelves, thief—thieves, wife—wives, wolf-wolves
e) -en
child—children, ox—oxen
f) vowel interchange
man—men, foot—feet, tooth—teeth, goose—geese, louse—lice, mouse—mice, woman—women
g) homonymous forms
sheep—sheep, deer—deer, grouse—grouse, plaice— plaice, salmon—salmon, pike—pike, trout—trout, carp—carp, moose—moose, fish—fish, cod—cod, series—series, species—species, means—means, (gas) works—(gas) works, barracks—barracks, headquarters—headquarters
h) ending in –us -i
stimulus—stimuli, nucleus—nuclei*, syllabus—syllabi*, focus—foci*, bacillus—bacilli, terminus—termini
i) ending in –a -ae
formula—formulae, antenna—antennae*, vertebra-vertebrae*
j) ending in -um -a
curriculum—curricula, memorandum—memoranda4, stratum—strata, addendum—addenda, bacterium bacteria, medium—media*, aquarium—aquaria*, symposium—symposia*, datum—data
k) ending in –is -es
crisis—crises, analysis—analyses, axis—axes, diagnosis—diagnoses, ellipsis—ellipses, hypothesis-hypotheses, oasis—oases, parenthesis—parentheses, synopsis—synopses, thesis—theses, basis—bases
1) ending in -ex/-ix -ices
codex—codices, index—indices*, appendix-appendices, matrix—matrices
Compound nouns:
a) plural in the last element
boy-friend—boy-friends, fountain pen—fountain pens, grown-up—grown-ups, assistant director—assistant directors, attorney general—attorney generals, mouthful—mouthfuls, spoonful—spoonfuls, roommate—room-mates, woman-hater—woman-haters, breakdown—breakdowns, overall—overalls, sit-in—sit-ins, stand-by—stand-bys, take-off—take-offs, forget-me-not—forget-me-nots, merry-go-round—merry-go-rounds, postman—postmen, Englishman-Englishmen, writing table—writing tables
b) plural in the first element
notary public—notaries public, passer-by—passers-by, mother-in-law—mothers-in-law, man-of-war—men-of-war, coat-of-mail—coats-of-mail, court-martial—courts-martial, commander-in-chief—commanders-in-chief