- In many languages, a
plural (sometimes
abbreviated as pl., pl, or PL), is one of the
values of the
grammatical category of number. The
plural of a noun...
- such as in /tʁavaj/ travail, "work", or when a word
ending in ⟨al⟩ is
pluralised,
giving ⟨aux⟩ /o/.
French pronunciation follows strict rules based on...
- but a few
nouns have
irregular plural forms. M****
nouns can only be
pluralised through the use of a
count noun classifier, e.g. one loaf of bread, two...
-
gerunds can
never be
pluralised in Latin, as
opposed to gerundives. When a noun with an
attribute in the
genitive is
pluralised, only the head noun normally...
-
predominates in
edited English as it
permits easier modification (e.g. by
pluralising).
Based on the
individual pronunciation of the
letters o and k in the...
-
Animate nouns end in -a (ex: tîtîwa /ˈti:.ti:.wa/, "blue jay (bird)"). To
pluralise most
animate nouns, the
ending is
transformed from -a to -aki (ex: tîtîwa...
- is
pluralised by
internal vowel changes: ktieb,
kotba " book", "books"; raġel, irġiel "man", "men".
Words of
Romance origin are
usually pluralised in...
- used for
example by
Alexander of
Tralles (c. 525 – c. 605). The
standard pluralised form of
octopus in
English is octopuses; the
Ancient Gr****
plural ὀκτώποδες...
- say "nos lowens" when
speaking English, in the same way
people might pluralise "ceilidhs" in English. Nos
lowen is
sometimes abbreviated as "nsl" online...
- lower-case k and,
being a word of Māori origin,
normally stays as kiwi when
pluralised.[failed verification] The
genus name
Apteryx is
derived from
Ancient Gr****...