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plural| Indication of number. Most English words form their plurals by the addition of s, as in boy, boys; cat, cats; book, books. The ending es is the next most common, as in watch, watches; church, churches; gas, gases; princess, princesses; bush, bushes; tax, taxes. This is simply to aid pronunciation. |
| There are spelling rules that aid the forming of plurals. The f/ves pattern seems clear enough in these words, for instance: wolf, wolves; half, halves, shelf, shelves; life, lives; wife, wives; knife, knives. But, as in the case of most English spelling rules, there are a disappointing number of exceptions: chief, chiefs; roof, roofs, for example. |
| The ‘change the y into i and add es’ rule works better: spy, spies; baby, babies; lady, ladies. Here the only exceptions are those where a vowel precedes the final y, as in donkey, donkeys; holiday, holidays. |
| The plurals that cause most trouble are those that follow no pattern - children, geese, women - and those that are the same in their singular and plural forms: deer, for example. |
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