English plural



         


In the English language, nouns are inflected for grammatical number—that is, singular or plural. This article discusses the variety of ways in which English nouns form their plurals. Phonetic transcriptions, given inside slashes, are in SAMPA notation.

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Regular plurals

The plural morpheme in English is suffixed to the end of most nouns. The plural form is usually represented orthographically by adding -s to the singular form (see exceptions below). The phonetic form of the plural morpheme is /z/ by default. When the preceding sound is a voiceless consonant (see phonation), it is pronounced /s/. Examples:

boy boys girl girls cat cats chair chairs

Where a noun ends in a sibilant sound—such as s, sh, x, soft ch—the plural is formed by adding es (also pronounced as z with a neutral vowel sound or short i):

glass glasses dish dishes witch witches

Morphophonetically, these rules are sufficient to describe most English plurals. However, there are several complications introduced in spelling.

The -oes rule: most nouns ending in o preceded by a consonant also form their plurals by adding -es (pronounced /z/):

hero heroes potato potatoes volcano volcanoes

The -ies rule: nouns ending in a y preceded by a consonant drop the y and add -ies (pronounced /:iz/):

cherry cherries lady ladies

Note, however, that proper nouns (particularly those for people or places) ending in a y preceded by a consonant form their plurals regularly:

Harry Harrys (as in There are three Harrys in our office) Germany Germanys (as in The two Germanys were unified in 1990)

This does not apply to words that are merely capitalised common nouns:

P&O Ferries (from ferry)

A few common nouns ending in a y preceded by a consonant form their plurals regularly:

henry henrys zloty zlotys
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Almost-regular plurals

Many nouns of Italian or Spanish origin are exceptions to this rule:

canto cantos grotto grottos piano pianos portico porticos quarto quartos solo solos

Most nouns ending in f or fe form their plurals by changing the f into a v and adding es:

calf calves half halves wolf wolves wharf wharves

Some just add an s:

proof proofs dwarf dwarfs / dwarves hoof hoofs / hooves staff staffs / staves turf turfs / turves (latter rare) roof roofs / rooves / roovis (latter two archaic)
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Irregular plurals

There are many other less regular ways of forming plurals. While they may seem quirky, they usually stem from older forms of English or from foreign borrowings.

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Irregular Germanic plurals

The plural of a few Germanic nouns can also be formed from the singular by adding n or en:

ox oxen eye eyen (Rare, found in some regional dialects) shoe shoon (Also rare/obsolete)

The word box, referring to a computer, is semi-humorously pluralized boxen in the Leet dialect. Multiple Vax computers, likewise, are sometimes called Vaxen.

The plural is sometimes formed by simply changing the vowel sound of the singular, in a process called umlaut (these are sometimes called mutated plurals):

foot feet goose geese louse lice man men mouse mice tooth teeth woman women


Some nouns have singular and plural alike:

sheep deer cod series trout
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Irregular plurals of foreign origin

Because English includes words from so many ancestral languages, as well as many loanwords from Classical Greek and Latin and other modern languages, there are many other forms of plurals. Such nouns often retain their original plurals, at least for some time after they are introduced. In some cases both forms are still vying for attention: for example, for a librarian, the plural of appendix is appendices (following the original language); for physicians, however, the plural of appendix is appendixes. Likewise, a radio engineer works with antennas and an entomologist deals with antennae. The "correct" form is the one that sounds better in context, or that people in the field use.

Correctly formed Latin plurals are the most acceptable, and indeed are often required, in academic and scientific contexts. In common usage, back-formed plurals are sometimes preferred. (See below for another kind of back-formed plural.)

formula formulae / formulas alumna alumnae
vertex vertices index indices / indexes
axis axes testis testes crisis crises
phenomenon phenomena (more below) criterion criteria automaton automata polyhedron polyhedra
addendum addenda memorandum memoranda / memorandums medium media
radius radii alumnus alumni viscus viscera corpus corpora

Note: See article on the Plural of virus.

Atlas Atlantes (statues of the hero); but atlas atlases (map collections)
stigma stigmata stoma stomata

Though some take s more commonly:

schema schemata / schemas dogma dogmata / dogmas
cactus cactuses / cacti hippopotamus hippopotamuses / hippopotami octopus octopuses / octopi platypus platypuses rhinoceros rhinoceroses / rhinoceri

The Greek plural for words ending in -pus meaning "foot", is podes, but this plural is not used in English.

beau beaux chateau chateaux
cherub cherubim / cherubs seraph seraphim / seraphs matzoh matzot / matzos
kimono kimono samurai samurai otaku otaku

Note: kimonos, following the French model, is now generally accepted in English.

Nouns from languages that have donated few words to English, and that are spoken by relatively few English-speakers, generally form plurals as if they were native English words:

canoe canoes kayak kayaks igloo igloos cwm cwms (Welsh valley)

Some words of foreign origin are much better known in the plural; usage of the proper singular may be considered pedantic or actually incorrect by some speakers. In common usage, the proper plural is considered the singular form. Back-formation has usually resulted in a regularized plural.

Proper singular Proper plural/ Common plural common singular candelabrum candelabra candelabras datum data data (mass noun) agendum agenda agendas / (less common) agendae graffito graffiti graffiti (mass noun) insigne insignia insignias alga algae algae / algaes opus opera operas viscus viscera (singular not in common usage) phalanx phalanges

Note: A single piece of data is often referred to as a data point. A military phalanx is pluralized phalanxes. The phalanges as body parts (fingers and toes) are rarely referred to in the singular.

A related phenomenon is the confusion of a foreign plural for its singular form:

phenomenon phenomena criterion criteria symposium symposia
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Plurals of numbers

Plurals for the names of numbers differ according to how they are used. Such words include dozen, hundred, thousand, million, and so forth. The following examples apply to all of these.

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Defective nouns

Some nouns have no singular form:

annals billiards cattle measles back-formation. (See below for another kind of back-formed plural.)

Some words in which the modifier follows the noun form the plural inside the word or phrase, particularly legal terms from French:

attorney general attorneys general son-in-law sons-in-law court martial courts martial armful armsful / armfuls (the latter is preferred today) governor-general governors-general Knight Hospitaller Knights Hospitallers agent provocateur agents provocateurs

It is common in informal speech to pluralise the last word in the usual way, but in edited prose, the forms given are preferred.

Non-countable, or "mass" nouns do not represent distinct objects, so the singular and plural semantics do not apply in the same way. Some examples:

goodness idleness wisdom deceit honesty freshness
chemistry geometry surgery biometrics mechanics optics blues (music)
antimony gold oxygen equipment furniture specie distress sand water air informations

Some mass nouns can be pluralized, but the meaning thereof may change slightly. For example, when I have two pieces of sand, I do not have two sands; I have sand. There is more sand in your pile, not more sands. But there could be many "sands of Africa" - either many distinct stretches of sand, or distinct types of sand of interest to geologists or builders, or simply the allusive sands of Africa.

It is rare to pluralize furniture in this way. Nor would information be so treated, except in the case of criminal informations, which are prosecutor's briefs similar to indictments.

There is only one class of atoms called oxygen, but there are several isotopes of oxygen, which might be referred to as different oxygens. In casual speech, oxygen might be used as shorthand for "oxygen atoms", but in this case it is not a mass noun, so it is entirely sensible to refer to multiple oxygens in the same molecule.

One would interpret "Bob's wisdoms" as various pieces of Bob's wisdom (that is, pieces of advice), deceits as a series of instances of deceitful behavior, and the different idlenesses of the worker as plural distinct manifestations of the mass concept of idleness (or as different types of idleness, "bone lazy" versus "no work to do").

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Nouns with multiple plurals

Some nouns have two plurals, one used to refer to a number of things considered individually, the other to refer to a number of things collectively. In some cases, one of the two is nowadays archaic or dialectal.

brother brothers brethren cannon cannons cannon child children childer* cow cows kine* die dice dies fish fish fishes* penny pennies pence* sow sows swine pig pigs swine iris iris irises* cloth cloths clothes*

A final odd case is person. The word people is usually treated as the suppletive plural of person (one person, many people). However, in legal and other formal contexts, the plural of person is persons; furthermore, people can also be a singular noun with its own plural (for example, "We are many persons, from many peoples").

Symbols and abbreviations whose plural would be ambiguous if only an s were added are pluralized by adding 's.

mind your p's and q's

Regular words and non-ambiguous abbreviations (like PCs or ICBMs) should be pluralized in the normal way, not with an apostrophe, lest they be confused with the possessive.

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Plurals of "headless" nouns

Linguist Steven Pinker, in his book, The Language Instinct discusses what he calls "headless words", that is, words like low-life and Red Sox where the life and sox are not being used in their ordinary senses. Thus, more than one low-life is low-lifes and a single member of the Boston baseball team is a Red Sox. Other examples include the ice-hockey Maple Leafs, not Maple Leaves, sabertooth and sabertooths, flatfoot and flatfoots, tenderfoot and tenderfoots, still life and still lifes. Thus, the plural of mongoose is mongooses.

The computer mouse is often pluralized mouses, although, in this case, mice is just as common because of the physical similarity between the input device and the rodent.

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Plural to singular by back formation

Some words have started out with unusually formed singulars and plurals, but more "normal" singular-plural pairs have resulted. For an example from the vegetable world, pease was the singular and peasen the plural, but over the centuries, first pease became the plural and pea the singular, and finally the plural was altered to peas. Similarly, termites and primates were the three-syllable plurals of termes and primas, respectively, but these singulars were lost, the plurals given two syllables, and now we have termite and termites and primate and primates. Syringe is a back formation from syringes, itself the plural of syrinx, a musical instrument. Cherry is from Norman French cherise. Finally, phases was once the plural of phasis, but the singular is now phase.

Kudos is a singular Greek word meaning praise, but the same process may be happening to it. At present, kudo is an error, however.

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Plurals of names of peoples

There are several different rules for this.

In discussing peoples whose demonym takes -man or -woman, there are two options: pluralize to -men or -women if referring to individuals, and use the root alone if referring to the whole nation.

Englishman Englishmen the English Frenchwoman Frenchwomen the French Dutchman or Dutch people the Dutch Dutchwoman

This also applies to the Irish and the Welsh. One can say "a Scots(wo)man" or "a Scot", "Scots(wo)men", "Scottish people", or "Scots," and "the Scottish" or "the Scots". (Scotch is a drink.)

Several peoples have names that are simple nouns and can be pluralized:

Dane Danes the Danes (or) the Danish Finn Finns the Finns (or) the Finnish Swede Swedes the Swedes (or) the Swedish Spaniard Spaniards the Spaniards (or) the Spanish (much more common)

Names of peoples that end in -ese take no plural:

Chinese Chinese the Chinese (or Chinese people)

Neither do Swiss or Quebecois.

Most names for American Aboriginal groups are not pluralized:

Ojibwa Ojibwa Iroquois Iroquois Blood Blood Mi'kmaq Mi'kmaq

Some exceptions include Crees, Mohawks, Hurons, Algonquins, Chippewas, Oneidas, Aztecs. Note also:

Inuk Inuit

Most other peoples of the world are pluralized using the normal English rules.






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