Words Ending in -ous vs -us
‘Dangerous’ or ‘dangerus’? ‘Famous’ or ‘famus’? The -OUS ending is for adjectives (describing words), while -US ending is for nouns (thing words). Mix them up and your spelling looks wrong immediately!
Quick rule: If the word describes something (adjective) → -OUS: dangerous, famous, nervous. If it’s a thing/person (noun) → -US: campus, bonus, virus. This page has 50 examples to make the pattern stick!
📝 -OUS Adjectives (Describing Words)
📝 More -OUS Adjectives
📦 -US Nouns (Thing/Person Words)
🎯 -IOUS vs -EOUS (Tricky!)
⚠️ Words That LOOK Like -ous But Aren’t
📐 5 Spelling Rules
-OUS = Adjective (Describing Word)
If the word describes something, it ends in -OUS: dangerous, famous, nervous, curious, generous.
-US = Noun (Thing/Person)
If the word is a thing or person, it often ends in -US: campus, bonus, virus, focus, genius.
-EOUS After G (Keep E!)
After G, keep E to keep G soft: courageous, outrageous, gorgeous, advantageous.
-ANEOUS/-EOUS (Not -ANIOUS/-IOUS!)
miscellaneous (not miscellanious), spontaneous (not spontanious), simultaneous (not simultanious).
Latin Nouns Keep -US
Words borrowed from Latin as nouns keep their -US ending: campus, bonus, stimulus, radius, syllabus.
🐝 Spelling Quiz
🔀 Word Scramble
Unscramble the letters
✏️ Fill in Missing Letters
Type the missing letters
❓ FAQ
How to tell -ous from -us?
Simple! Is the word describing something (adjective)? → -OUS (dangerous, famous). Is it a thing or person (noun)? → -US (campus, bonus, virus). Adjective = -OUS, Noun = -US.
Why keep E in ‘courageous’?
Without E, the G would make a hard sound: ‘courag-ous’ → ‘courag-us’ (hard G). The E keeps G soft (like ‘j’). Same for outrageous, advantageous.
What about words ending in -ious?
-IOUS is a variant of -OUS: anxious, spacious, precious, delicious. They’re all still adjectives! The I comes from the root word pattern.
Is ‘genius’ -ous or -us?
Genius is a NOUN (a smart person), so it ends in -US. But ‘ingenious’ (adjective meaning clever) ends in -IOUS. The part of speech determines the ending!
What about ‘miscellaneous’ vs ‘miscellanious’?
It’s miscellANEOUS (not miscellANIOUS). The ending is -ANEOUS, not -ANIOUS. Same pattern: spontANEOUS, simultANEOUS, instantANEOUS.