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It is the process of writing a word or words in proper letter-
arrangement of form as recognized by the lexicographers.
It is one of the measurement that brings about quality and
appropriateness in composition writing.
 In monosyllabic words that end with a single consonant preceded by a single
vowel, the final consonant should be doubled before a suffix that begins with a
vowel is added.
Ban Banning Banned
Bar Barring Barred
Blur Blurring Blurred
Brim Brimming Brimmed
Can Canning Canned
Dim Dimming Dimmed
Drop Dropping Dropped
Fan Fanning Fanned
Fit Fitting Fitted
 In words ending with a single consonant preceded by double vowels,
the final consonant is not doubled even if the suffix to be added begins
with a vowel.
Air Airing Aired
Bloat Bloating Bloated
Board Boarding Boarded
Boil Boiling Boiled
Book Booking Booked
Coil Coiling Coiled
Conceal Concealing Concealed
Greet Greeting Greeted
Heal Healing Healed
Heat Heating Heated
Join Joining Joined
 The single consonant ending of
words containing more than one
syllables is not doubled when a
suffix that begins with a vowel is
added, if the accent does not fall
on the last syllable.
Benefit Benefiting Benefited
Broaden Broadening Broadened
Counsel Counseling Counseled
Develop Developing Developed
Gossip Gossiping Gossiped
Hasten Hastening Hastened
Lighten Lightening Lighted
Listen Listening Listened
Mention Mentioning Mentioned
Profit Profiting Profited
Suffer Suffering Suffered
 If words containing more than one syllables end with single consonant preceded
by single vowel, the consonant ending doubled before a suffix that begins with a
vowel is added when the accent falls on the last syllable.
Admit Admitting Admitted
Confer Conferring Conferred
Excel Excelling Excelled
Occur Occurring Occurred
Prefer Preferring Preferred
Propel Propelling Propelled
Refer Referring Referred
Regret Regretting Regretted
Remit Remitting Remitted
Transmit Transmitting transmitted
In the words ending with silent E, the E is dropped before a suffix beginning with a
vowel is added.
Admire Admiring Admirable Admiration
Advise Advising Advisable Advisability
Create Creating Creatable Creation
Cure Curing Curable Curability
Decline Declining Declinable Declination
Desire Desiring Desirable Desirability
Excite Exciting Excitable Excitability
Excuse Excusing Excusable Excusatory
Note Noting Notable Notation
Observe Observable Observable Observation
Serve Serving Servable
 In present progressive form of verbs ending with E, drop the E before adding ing.
Bake Baking
Lose Losing
Bike Biking
Love Loving
Tame Taming
 In words ending with silent E, the E is retained before adding a suffix that begins with a
consonant.
 (exception to rule 7: acknowledgement and judgement)
Careful Arrangement Merely
Graceful Excitement Scarcely
Grateful Inducement Sincerely
Hopeful Procurement Entirely
Shameful Advertisement Ninety
Useful Basement Safety
 Words ending with CE or GE retain the final E when the suffix -ous or -able is
added
 If words end with silent E, then preceded by u, drop suffix beginning with a
consonant is added:
Changeable Noticeable Advantageous
Chargeable Peaceable Courageous
Enforceable Sizeable Gorgeous
Manageable Traceable Umbrageous
Argue Argument True Truly
Due Duly Glue Glutinous
 With respect to verbs ending in IE
Die Dying
Gie Gying
Hie Hying
Lie Lying
Tying Vying
 Words ending in y preceded with a consonant
Accompany Accompaniment Accompanied
Beauty Beauties Beautiful
Bounty Bounties Bountiful
Easy Easily Easier
Friendly Friendliness Friendlier
Godly Godliness Godlier
Happy Happiness Happily
Kindly Kindliness Kindlier
Lofty Loftiness Loftier
Marry Marriage Marriageable
Merry Merrily Merriment
When suffix –ing is added:
 Accompany accompanying
 Beautify beautifying
 Clarify clarifying
 Carry carrying
 Defy defying
 Dignify dignifying
 Exemplify exemplifying
 Hurry hurrying
 Lay laying
 Magnify magnifying
 Marry marrying
 Notify notifying
 Say saying
 Simplify simplifying
 Stay staying
 Study studying
 Terrify terrifying
 Verify verifying
Actual Actually Practical Practically
Casual Casually Real Really
Final Finally Special specially
General generally Universal Universally
Legal Legally Usual Usually
Loyal Loyally
Oral Orally
Original Originally
Partial Partially
To convert the adjectives ending in I
 To make the plural form nouns ending with y
Note: the rule does not apply with proper nouns ( Garrys,Germany,Henrys,Kelly)
Army Armies
Body Bodies
Candy Candies
Copy Copies
Country Countries
Lady Ladies
City Cities
Family Families
Company Companies
Library Libraries
Lily lilies
Party Parties
 plural forms of nouns ending in y, preceded by vowels
Bay Bays
Boy Boys
Day Days
Donkey Donkeys
Kidney Kidneys
Monkey Monkeys
Pulley Pulleys
Ray Rays
Toy Toys
Tray Trays
Valley Valleys
 To form plurals of nouns ending in o:
 Buffalo buffaloes
 Echo echoes
 Hero
 Mango
 Mosquito
 Negro
 Potato
 Tomato
 Tornado
 Volcano
 To form plurals of nouns ending in o by vowels
Barrio Barrios Cameo Cameos
Carabao Carabaos Stereo stereos
Folio Folios Studio Studios
Patio Patios Trio Trios
Sitio Sitios Video Videos
 When the word has ee
sound, use ei after c, and
ie after any other letter
Ceiling
Deceit
Receive
Besiege
Chandelier
Chief
Die
Drier
Fierce
Grief
Handkerchief
Lien
Relief
Shield
Thief
Vie
Wield
Yield
 Note: It is not applicable to most words
which are Latin in origin.The following
examples are exceptions to the rule
hence their spelling must be
underscored with special concern:
 Beige (natural color)
 Fahrenheit (scale in measuring
temperature)
 Feign (to pretend)
 Foreign (belonging to another
country)
 Freight (to lose a right by terms)
 Forfeit (goods carried by any
vehicle)
 Height (elevation)
 Heinous (extremely wicked)
 Lei (garland; ornamental
headdress)
 Leisure (spare time)
 Reign (to exercise an authority)
 Seize (to take hold on something
forcibly)
 Sleigh (a light vehicle used on snow)
 Weight (to ascertain the weight of
something)
 Weird (concerned with the
unnatural; strange)
 With respect to words ending in c:
 Panic – panicky panicking panicked
 Picnic- picnicker picnicking picnicked
 Traffic- trafficker trafficking trafficked
 In most monosyllabic words ending with n, then the n is doubled before a valid
suffix is added
 ban - banning
 Fan - fanning
 Grin - grinning
 Man - manning
 Clan - clannish
 Mean - meanness
 Tan - tannery
 To form the plurals of nouns ending with
f, or fe
 Calf - calves
 Half - halves
 Leaf - leaves
 Life - lives
 Loaf - loaves
 Knife - knives
 Self - selves
 Shelf – shelves
 Thief – thieves
 Wife - wives
 Note:The following words are exceptions to the rule.They form their plurals
by just adding s, viz:
 Belief – beliefs
 Chief – chiefs
 hoof – hoofs
 Relief – reliefs
 Dwarf – dwarfs
 Grief – griefs
 Scarf – scarfs
 Strife - strifes
 To form the plurals of nouns ending in ch, sh ,s, x, and z, just add es, as in the
following examples:
 Branch - branches
 Class – classes
 Glass – glasses
 Church – churches
 Quiz – quizzes
 Waltz – waltzes
 Fox – foxes
 Lass - lasses
 The plurals of the following nouns are spelled by changing the vowel or vowels
within the words, as written below, viz:
Singular Plural
Fireman Firemen
Foot Feet
Mouse Mice
Goose Geese
Tooth Teeth
Louse Lice
Woman Women
 Words adopted from foreign languages
form their plurals in ways :
 Agendum - agenda
 Alumna - alumni
 Alumna - alumnae
 Beau - beaus
 Fungus - fungi
 Oasis - oases
 Criterion - criteria
 Datum - data
 Appendix - appendices
 Formula - formulae
 Memorandum - memoranda
 Stimulus - stimuli
 Each of the following expressions should be written as separate words, not as one word:
 Any day in lieu of
 Any more in order
 Any time in place of
 Business man in spite of
 Every time of course
 In charge once in a while
 In fact per capita
 In favor
 In front
 Each of the following expressions should be written as one word, not as separate
words
 Hereabout hereinbefore
 Hereafter hereinto
 Hereat
 Hereby
 Herein
 Hereinafter
 Hereinbefore
 When written in words, numbers from 21 to 99 should be hyphenated, as
hereunder shown:
 Twenty-one
 Thirty-one
 Forty-one
 Fifty-one
 Sixty-one
 Seventy-one
 Eighty-one
 Ninety-one
 When used as modifiers, compound words are hyphenated:
 An up-to-date report
 Beginning-of-the-School-year meeting’s
 Dagger-like eyes
 End-of-the-year activities
 Four-footed animals
 Man-made caves
 Monster-like mask
 One-time manager
 When used as modifiers, fractions written in words should be hyphenated, viz:
 One-half. For winning in the contest, Rosario was awarded a medal of one-half size
of a saucer.
 One-third. One-third portion of the cash prize was donated to the church.
 Two-thirds.Two-thirds votes of the members were invalidated.
 Three-fourths. His pencil is three-fourths length of a meter.
 When used as nouns, fractions written in words need not be hyphenated.They are
just written as separate words, viz:
 One half. One half of the audience has gone home.
 One third. I obtained one third of the votes of my class.
 Two thirds.Two thirds of the delegates arrived early.
 One fourth. I gave one fourth of my share to my friends.
 Three fourths. One half plus one fourth is equal to three fourths.
 The prefix-root word combination should be hyphenated, if the same
combination without hyphen has a different meaning, as in the
following examples:
 Re-cover. please, re-cover the book.
 Re-lease. I have to re-lease our house.
 Re-tire. To be safe, re-tire your car.
 Re-sign. It is necessary to re-sign the documents.
 Note: Compare the above sentences with the following:
 We hope he can recover from his illness.
 An early release of her grades is requested.
 I retired last year from my profession.
 Do not resign from your job. Avail yourself of the retirement benefits.
 In combination of prefix ending with a vowel with a root word begins also with
vowel it is better to use a hyphen.
There’s a need to re-arm the school guards.
To re-ink the contract today is impossible.
We co-opted to fight for the rights of the victims.
The presentation is just a re-enactment of the crime being investigated.
We have to re-insure the safety of the students.
Is there any need for former applicants to re-apply?
We have to re-arrange the chairs.
 A hyphen should be used to set off a prefix paced before a proper noun:
 Anti-American / Pro-American
 Anti-Filipino / Pro-Catholic
 Non-Moslem / Pre-Spanish
 Non-Christian / Un-Christian
 By reason of usage, official designations must be hyphenated.
 Even the prefix ex ( if attached to official position)
 Ambassador-at-Large ex-president ex-councilor
 Attorney-at-Law ex-senator ex-judge
 Commander-in-Chief ex-mayor
 Editor-in-Chief ex-vice mayor
 Vice-Chairman ex-congressman
 Officer-in-Charge ex-governor
 If attached by notable era, period or event, the prefix pre and post should also
hyphenated.
 Pre-election period post-liberation period
 Pre- war days post-election campaign
 Pre-Spanish times post-war
 Pre-Victorian era post-convention
 The ff nouns cannot be made plural by adding s or es. To pluralize them, make use
of phrases indicative of their numerical figures:
Singular Form Plural Form
Baggage Pieces,or bundles of baggage
Blood Bottles,cups,or drops of blood
Chalk Pieces or boxes of chalk
Coffee Packs or cups of coffee
Dirt Particles or cans of dirt
Equipment Truckloads or units of equipment
Furniture Pieces or classes of furniture
Instruction Standards or means of instruction
Remark Bits of remark
Salt Dashes,pinches,spoonfuls or cups of
salt
Singular Form Plural Form
Rice Grains,kilos,bags,liters,gantasor sacks of rice
Sand Shovels or cans of sand
Water Gallons or drums of water
Wood Piles or stocks of wood
Work Much work; types of work
Adding s or es in the following nouns differ in meaning:
1. Cloth/ Clothes
2. Fish/Fishes
3. Glass/Glasses
4. Instruction/instructions
5. People/Peoples
 Reflexive pronouns are not hyphenated; self must be set as hyphenated:
 He is a self-made man.
 The memorandum of the president is self-explanatory.
 What she is doing is a manifestation of self-sacrifice.
 Nobody will serve us. I think it’s self-service.
 If used as adverb in a sentence, each of the ff terms should be written as one word:
 anymore -by any means
 Don’t give me an invitation anymore.
 Somehow -in an unexplained manner
 I hope Mark would somehow succeed in life.
 Any thing of value must be preserved. (any modifies thing, a noun)
 Designations of relationship by affinity
 By relationship in previous marriage by parents
Father-in-law mother-in-law
Brother-in-law sister-in-law
Son-in-law daughter-in-law
Stepbrother, stepfather, stepson,stepchild,
stepparent, stepmother
 Correct spelling demands that all proper nouns should be capitalized.

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Spelling and Word Structure

  • 1.
  • 2. It is the process of writing a word or words in proper letter- arrangement of form as recognized by the lexicographers. It is one of the measurement that brings about quality and appropriateness in composition writing.
  • 3.
  • 4.  In monosyllabic words that end with a single consonant preceded by a single vowel, the final consonant should be doubled before a suffix that begins with a vowel is added. Ban Banning Banned Bar Barring Barred Blur Blurring Blurred Brim Brimming Brimmed Can Canning Canned Dim Dimming Dimmed Drop Dropping Dropped Fan Fanning Fanned Fit Fitting Fitted
  • 5.  In words ending with a single consonant preceded by double vowels, the final consonant is not doubled even if the suffix to be added begins with a vowel. Air Airing Aired Bloat Bloating Bloated Board Boarding Boarded Boil Boiling Boiled Book Booking Booked Coil Coiling Coiled Conceal Concealing Concealed Greet Greeting Greeted Heal Healing Healed Heat Heating Heated Join Joining Joined
  • 6.  The single consonant ending of words containing more than one syllables is not doubled when a suffix that begins with a vowel is added, if the accent does not fall on the last syllable. Benefit Benefiting Benefited Broaden Broadening Broadened Counsel Counseling Counseled Develop Developing Developed Gossip Gossiping Gossiped Hasten Hastening Hastened Lighten Lightening Lighted Listen Listening Listened Mention Mentioning Mentioned Profit Profiting Profited Suffer Suffering Suffered
  • 7.  If words containing more than one syllables end with single consonant preceded by single vowel, the consonant ending doubled before a suffix that begins with a vowel is added when the accent falls on the last syllable. Admit Admitting Admitted Confer Conferring Conferred Excel Excelling Excelled Occur Occurring Occurred Prefer Preferring Preferred Propel Propelling Propelled Refer Referring Referred Regret Regretting Regretted Remit Remitting Remitted Transmit Transmitting transmitted
  • 8. In the words ending with silent E, the E is dropped before a suffix beginning with a vowel is added. Admire Admiring Admirable Admiration Advise Advising Advisable Advisability Create Creating Creatable Creation Cure Curing Curable Curability Decline Declining Declinable Declination Desire Desiring Desirable Desirability Excite Exciting Excitable Excitability Excuse Excusing Excusable Excusatory Note Noting Notable Notation Observe Observable Observable Observation Serve Serving Servable
  • 9.  In present progressive form of verbs ending with E, drop the E before adding ing. Bake Baking Lose Losing Bike Biking Love Loving Tame Taming
  • 10.  In words ending with silent E, the E is retained before adding a suffix that begins with a consonant.  (exception to rule 7: acknowledgement and judgement) Careful Arrangement Merely Graceful Excitement Scarcely Grateful Inducement Sincerely Hopeful Procurement Entirely Shameful Advertisement Ninety Useful Basement Safety
  • 11.  Words ending with CE or GE retain the final E when the suffix -ous or -able is added  If words end with silent E, then preceded by u, drop suffix beginning with a consonant is added: Changeable Noticeable Advantageous Chargeable Peaceable Courageous Enforceable Sizeable Gorgeous Manageable Traceable Umbrageous Argue Argument True Truly Due Duly Glue Glutinous
  • 12.  With respect to verbs ending in IE Die Dying Gie Gying Hie Hying Lie Lying Tying Vying
  • 13.  Words ending in y preceded with a consonant Accompany Accompaniment Accompanied Beauty Beauties Beautiful Bounty Bounties Bountiful Easy Easily Easier Friendly Friendliness Friendlier Godly Godliness Godlier Happy Happiness Happily Kindly Kindliness Kindlier Lofty Loftiness Loftier Marry Marriage Marriageable Merry Merrily Merriment
  • 14. When suffix –ing is added:  Accompany accompanying  Beautify beautifying  Clarify clarifying  Carry carrying  Defy defying  Dignify dignifying  Exemplify exemplifying  Hurry hurrying  Lay laying  Magnify magnifying  Marry marrying  Notify notifying  Say saying  Simplify simplifying  Stay staying  Study studying  Terrify terrifying  Verify verifying
  • 15. Actual Actually Practical Practically Casual Casually Real Really Final Finally Special specially General generally Universal Universally Legal Legally Usual Usually Loyal Loyally Oral Orally Original Originally Partial Partially To convert the adjectives ending in I
  • 16.  To make the plural form nouns ending with y Note: the rule does not apply with proper nouns ( Garrys,Germany,Henrys,Kelly) Army Armies Body Bodies Candy Candies Copy Copies Country Countries Lady Ladies City Cities Family Families Company Companies Library Libraries Lily lilies Party Parties
  • 17.  plural forms of nouns ending in y, preceded by vowels Bay Bays Boy Boys Day Days Donkey Donkeys Kidney Kidneys Monkey Monkeys Pulley Pulleys Ray Rays Toy Toys Tray Trays Valley Valleys
  • 18.  To form plurals of nouns ending in o:  Buffalo buffaloes  Echo echoes  Hero  Mango  Mosquito  Negro  Potato  Tomato  Tornado  Volcano
  • 19.  To form plurals of nouns ending in o by vowels Barrio Barrios Cameo Cameos Carabao Carabaos Stereo stereos Folio Folios Studio Studios Patio Patios Trio Trios Sitio Sitios Video Videos
  • 20.  When the word has ee sound, use ei after c, and ie after any other letter Ceiling Deceit Receive Besiege Chandelier Chief Die Drier Fierce Grief Handkerchief Lien Relief Shield Thief Vie Wield Yield
  • 21.  Note: It is not applicable to most words which are Latin in origin.The following examples are exceptions to the rule hence their spelling must be underscored with special concern:  Beige (natural color)  Fahrenheit (scale in measuring temperature)  Feign (to pretend)  Foreign (belonging to another country)  Freight (to lose a right by terms)  Forfeit (goods carried by any vehicle)  Height (elevation)  Heinous (extremely wicked)  Lei (garland; ornamental headdress)  Leisure (spare time)  Reign (to exercise an authority)  Seize (to take hold on something forcibly)  Sleigh (a light vehicle used on snow)  Weight (to ascertain the weight of something)  Weird (concerned with the unnatural; strange)
  • 22.  With respect to words ending in c:  Panic – panicky panicking panicked  Picnic- picnicker picnicking picnicked  Traffic- trafficker trafficking trafficked
  • 23.  In most monosyllabic words ending with n, then the n is doubled before a valid suffix is added  ban - banning  Fan - fanning  Grin - grinning  Man - manning  Clan - clannish  Mean - meanness  Tan - tannery
  • 24.  To form the plurals of nouns ending with f, or fe  Calf - calves  Half - halves  Leaf - leaves  Life - lives  Loaf - loaves  Knife - knives  Self - selves  Shelf – shelves  Thief – thieves  Wife - wives
  • 25.  Note:The following words are exceptions to the rule.They form their plurals by just adding s, viz:  Belief – beliefs  Chief – chiefs  hoof – hoofs  Relief – reliefs  Dwarf – dwarfs  Grief – griefs  Scarf – scarfs  Strife - strifes
  • 26.  To form the plurals of nouns ending in ch, sh ,s, x, and z, just add es, as in the following examples:  Branch - branches  Class – classes  Glass – glasses  Church – churches  Quiz – quizzes  Waltz – waltzes  Fox – foxes  Lass - lasses
  • 27.  The plurals of the following nouns are spelled by changing the vowel or vowels within the words, as written below, viz: Singular Plural Fireman Firemen Foot Feet Mouse Mice Goose Geese Tooth Teeth Louse Lice Woman Women
  • 28.  Words adopted from foreign languages form their plurals in ways :  Agendum - agenda  Alumna - alumni  Alumna - alumnae  Beau - beaus  Fungus - fungi  Oasis - oases  Criterion - criteria  Datum - data  Appendix - appendices  Formula - formulae  Memorandum - memoranda  Stimulus - stimuli
  • 29.  Each of the following expressions should be written as separate words, not as one word:  Any day in lieu of  Any more in order  Any time in place of  Business man in spite of  Every time of course  In charge once in a while  In fact per capita  In favor  In front
  • 30.  Each of the following expressions should be written as one word, not as separate words  Hereabout hereinbefore  Hereafter hereinto  Hereat  Hereby  Herein  Hereinafter  Hereinbefore
  • 31.  When written in words, numbers from 21 to 99 should be hyphenated, as hereunder shown:  Twenty-one  Thirty-one  Forty-one  Fifty-one  Sixty-one  Seventy-one  Eighty-one  Ninety-one
  • 32.  When used as modifiers, compound words are hyphenated:  An up-to-date report  Beginning-of-the-School-year meeting’s  Dagger-like eyes  End-of-the-year activities  Four-footed animals  Man-made caves  Monster-like mask  One-time manager
  • 33.  When used as modifiers, fractions written in words should be hyphenated, viz:  One-half. For winning in the contest, Rosario was awarded a medal of one-half size of a saucer.  One-third. One-third portion of the cash prize was donated to the church.  Two-thirds.Two-thirds votes of the members were invalidated.  Three-fourths. His pencil is three-fourths length of a meter.
  • 34.  When used as nouns, fractions written in words need not be hyphenated.They are just written as separate words, viz:  One half. One half of the audience has gone home.  One third. I obtained one third of the votes of my class.  Two thirds.Two thirds of the delegates arrived early.  One fourth. I gave one fourth of my share to my friends.  Three fourths. One half plus one fourth is equal to three fourths.
  • 35.  The prefix-root word combination should be hyphenated, if the same combination without hyphen has a different meaning, as in the following examples:  Re-cover. please, re-cover the book.  Re-lease. I have to re-lease our house.  Re-tire. To be safe, re-tire your car.  Re-sign. It is necessary to re-sign the documents.  Note: Compare the above sentences with the following:  We hope he can recover from his illness.  An early release of her grades is requested.  I retired last year from my profession.  Do not resign from your job. Avail yourself of the retirement benefits.
  • 36.  In combination of prefix ending with a vowel with a root word begins also with vowel it is better to use a hyphen. There’s a need to re-arm the school guards. To re-ink the contract today is impossible. We co-opted to fight for the rights of the victims. The presentation is just a re-enactment of the crime being investigated. We have to re-insure the safety of the students. Is there any need for former applicants to re-apply? We have to re-arrange the chairs.
  • 37.  A hyphen should be used to set off a prefix paced before a proper noun:  Anti-American / Pro-American  Anti-Filipino / Pro-Catholic  Non-Moslem / Pre-Spanish  Non-Christian / Un-Christian
  • 38.  By reason of usage, official designations must be hyphenated.  Even the prefix ex ( if attached to official position)  Ambassador-at-Large ex-president ex-councilor  Attorney-at-Law ex-senator ex-judge  Commander-in-Chief ex-mayor  Editor-in-Chief ex-vice mayor  Vice-Chairman ex-congressman  Officer-in-Charge ex-governor
  • 39.  If attached by notable era, period or event, the prefix pre and post should also hyphenated.  Pre-election period post-liberation period  Pre- war days post-election campaign  Pre-Spanish times post-war  Pre-Victorian era post-convention
  • 40.  The ff nouns cannot be made plural by adding s or es. To pluralize them, make use of phrases indicative of their numerical figures: Singular Form Plural Form Baggage Pieces,or bundles of baggage Blood Bottles,cups,or drops of blood Chalk Pieces or boxes of chalk Coffee Packs or cups of coffee Dirt Particles or cans of dirt Equipment Truckloads or units of equipment Furniture Pieces or classes of furniture Instruction Standards or means of instruction Remark Bits of remark Salt Dashes,pinches,spoonfuls or cups of salt
  • 41. Singular Form Plural Form Rice Grains,kilos,bags,liters,gantasor sacks of rice Sand Shovels or cans of sand Water Gallons or drums of water Wood Piles or stocks of wood Work Much work; types of work
  • 42. Adding s or es in the following nouns differ in meaning: 1. Cloth/ Clothes 2. Fish/Fishes 3. Glass/Glasses 4. Instruction/instructions 5. People/Peoples
  • 43.  Reflexive pronouns are not hyphenated; self must be set as hyphenated:  He is a self-made man.  The memorandum of the president is self-explanatory.  What she is doing is a manifestation of self-sacrifice.  Nobody will serve us. I think it’s self-service.
  • 44.  If used as adverb in a sentence, each of the ff terms should be written as one word:  anymore -by any means  Don’t give me an invitation anymore.  Somehow -in an unexplained manner  I hope Mark would somehow succeed in life.  Any thing of value must be preserved. (any modifies thing, a noun)
  • 45.  Designations of relationship by affinity  By relationship in previous marriage by parents Father-in-law mother-in-law Brother-in-law sister-in-law Son-in-law daughter-in-law Stepbrother, stepfather, stepson,stepchild, stepparent, stepmother
  • 46.
  • 47.  Correct spelling demands that all proper nouns should be capitalized.