Esperanto gives little festive hats to some of its cees, gees, aitches, jays, esses, and ues.
Source: tatoeba (800351)
Ranked by relevance and common usage.
OpenGloss and ConceptNet supply richer edges like generalizations, collocations, and derivations.
7 total sentences available.
Esperanto gives little festive hats to some of its cees, gees, aitches, jays, esses, and ues.
Source: tatoeba (800351)
WWW: three double-ues.
Source: wiktionary
These names […] may form regular plurals; thus, Aes, Bees, Cees, Dees, Ees, Effs, Gees, Aitches, Ies, Jays, Kays, Ells, Ems, Ens, Oes, Pees, Kues, Ars, Esses, Tees, Ues, Vees, Double-ues, Exes, Wies, Zees.
Source: wiktionary
1998, Ricardo Corona, "These Esses" ("Esses esses"), in Other Shores (Outras Praias), translated by Ricardo Corona & Charles Perrone to say (full of ees, ies, ues) that plurals are always two or more
Source: wiktionary
Showing 4 of 7 available sentences.
Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.