Learn English – Why does the 3rd-person of verbs that end in -y follow the rule for plural nouns instead of verbs

conjugationgrammatical-numberinflectional-morphologyorthography

I don’t understand why the 3rd-person of verbs that end in -y such as cry, try, or fly follow the rule for pluralizing nouns like fly. Why do they become cries, tries, and flies instead of crys, trys, and flys? This makes no sense because we are not talking about plurals, or even nouns. Plus, this form is not consistent with the 3rd-person form of other verbs like jump->jumps or eat->eats.

Is there any rational reason for this or is it simply yet another example of arbitrary and inconsistent English grammar?

Best Answer

When working with words that end in Y, the rules are the same to pluralize nouns and to conjugate a verb for the present tense in third person singular (he, she, it). The rules are:

  • Where a consonant comes before the Y, change the y to i and add es
  • Where a vowel comes before the Y, just add s

For an example of a verb where a consonant comes before the Y, look at how fry becomes fries. (He fries. She fries. It fries.)

For an example of a verb where a vowel comes before the Y, look at how fray becomes frays. (He frays. She frays. It frays.)

The bonus here is that when you move on to conjugate the verb for the past tense, the rule remains similar:

  • Where a consonant comes before the Y, change the y to i and add ed
  • Where a vowel comes before the Y, just add ed

Thus, the past tense for fry becomes fried and the past tense for fray becomes frayed.

Related Topic