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The word 鈥榩lural鈥 comes from the Old French 鈥榩lurel鈥 which means 鈥榤ore than one鈥.

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Introduction to plural nouns

  • A plural noun is used when there is more than one of something

  • Most follow rules to turn them into plural nouns

  • Some plural nouns are and can be difficult to spell because they don't follow any patterns or rules

A video about how to pluralise nouns

Learn the rules and patterns you need to turn a noun into a plural noun

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Plural nouns

Plural means more than one and a noun is a word used to identify something. So, plural nouns are nouns that are more than one, for example, 鈥birds鈥 is the plural of 鈥bird鈥 and the word 鈥cities鈥 is the plural of 鈥city鈥.

Some plural nouns can be difficult to spell. There are rules that can help you remember how to spell plural nouns. The rules for regular plural nouns are:

  • Just add an 鈥榮鈥
  • Add an 'es'
  • Drop the 鈥榶鈥 and add 鈥榠es颅鈥
  • Replace the 鈥榝鈥 or 鈥榝e鈥 ending with 鈥榲es鈥

Check your knowledge and find out which rules you need a refresher on using the quiz below.

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Just add an 鈥榮鈥

The simplest plural noun to remember is when you just add an 鈥榮鈥:

  • birthday becomes birthdays
  • present becomes presents
  • animal becomes animals
  • dream becomes dreams

Most plural nouns follow this simple rule and these words are easier to spell.

Remember that adding apostrophe followed 's' does not make a plural noun. It is used for contractions and to show possession. For example:

  • 鈥榃e saw lots of bird鈥檚 in the garden鈥 - is incorrect
  • 鈥榃e saw lots of birds in the garden鈥 - is correct

If you need a refresher on how and when to use apostrophes, look at the guide on how to check your apostrophes are correct.

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Add an 'es'

If a noun ends in an 鈥榮鈥 , 鈥榮h鈥, 鈥榗h鈥, 鈥榵鈥 or 'z' then you add an 鈥榚s鈥 on the end of the word to make it plural. A useful way to remember this, is that words ending with a 鈥榟issing鈥, 鈥榖uzzing鈥 or 鈥榳hooshing鈥 sound end in an 鈥榚s鈥 when they become plural:

  • bus becomes buses
  • box becomes boxes
  • church becomes churches
  • dish becomes dishes

If a noun ends in a consonant followed by an 鈥榦鈥 you also add 鈥榚s鈥 to the end of the word. For example:

  • volcano becomes volcanoes
  • hero becomes heroes
  • echo becomes echoes

To understand plural rules, it helps to know the difference between a vowel - a, e, i, o, u and a consonant - all the other letters in the alphabet.

Find the words that need an 'es'

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Drop the 鈥榶鈥 and add 鈥榠es颅鈥

If a noun ends in a consonant and followed by a 鈥榶鈥, then the 鈥榶鈥 is removed and 鈥榠es鈥 is added. For example:

  • army becomes armies
  • story becomes stories
  • berry becomes berries
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Replace the 鈥榝鈥 or 鈥榝e鈥 ending with 鈥榲es鈥

If a noun ends in an 鈥榝鈥 or 鈥榝e鈥 it is usually replaced with a 鈥榲es鈥 ending:

  • half becomes halves
  • life becomes lives
  • scarf becomes scarves

However, there are also some plural nouns that are irregular and don鈥檛 follow this rule:

  • belief becomes beliefs
  • chef becomes chefs
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Irregular plurals

Some plurals don鈥檛 follow any patterns or rules - these are also called irregular plurals.

The word 鈥foot鈥 becomes 鈥feet鈥 when you make it plural. 鈥Child鈥 becomes 鈥children鈥. These irregular plurals are tricky to spell and often just have to be remembered.

Plurals that stay the same

Some nouns don鈥檛 change at all when made plural. Many plurals that refer to animals, for example, don鈥檛 change:

  • We caught one fish and then later lots of fish.
  • One sheep escaped, the rest of the sheep stayed in the field.

Although these plural rules may seem complicated, the more you read, the more familiar they will become.

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Test your knowledge

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