Irregular Plural Nouns-Learn Patterns To Remember The Tricky Ones
Irregular Plural Nouns-Learn Patterns To Remember The Tricky Ones
Irregular plural nouns are nouns that do not become plural by adding -s or -es, as most nouns in the English
language do. You’re probably familiar with many of these already. For example, the plural form of man is
men, not mans. The plural form of woman is women, not womans. There are hundreds of irregular plural
nouns, and in truth, you must memorize them through reading and speaking. There are, however, some
common patterns to look out for.
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knife knives
life lives
wife wives
calf calves
leaf leaves
Nouns ending in -o
Plurals of words ending in -o are usually made by adding -es.
potato potatoes
tomato tomatoes
hero heroes
torpedo torpedoes
veto vetoes
But of course, there are exceptions. (Aren’t there always?) Some words ending in -o that are borrowed from
other languages take only an s to make a plural, such as pianos, cantos, photos, and zeros. Cello, which is an
abbreviation of the Italian word violoncello, can be pluralized in the traditional way, as celli, or the
commonly accepted anglicized way, as cellos.
foot feet
tooth teeth
goose geese
man men
woman women
Fun fact: The eighteenth-century American dictionary reformer Noah Webster preferred spellings that were
closer to their most common pronunciations. Thus, he advocated for the return of the Old English plural
wimmen. Wouldn’t that have been convenient?
mouse mice
louse lice
die dice
ox oxen
child children
person people
sheep
fish
moose
swine
buffalo
shrimp
deer
trout
I have seen several deer when walking in the woods near here.
Aircraft, watercraft, hovercraft, and spacecraft are all the same whether singular or plural.
NASA has made several different types of spacecraft in its fifty-nine-year history.
fungus fungi
nucleus nuclei
cactus cacti
alumnus alumni
With the double i, radii (pronounced RAY-dee-i) sounds unwieldy, but if you are a mathematician, you
probably use it every day. If you are a zoologist, you might say, “Hey, did you see those hippopotami?” but it
would sound silly on a casual visit to the zoo. Many people resist the spelling octopuses, but it is perfectly
acceptable. In fact, if you put a fine point on it, since octopus is of Greek origin rather than Latin,
theoretically the plural should be octopodes, not octopi.
analysis analyses
crisis crises
thesis theses
criterion criteria
datum data
memorandum memoranda
bacterium bacteria
stratum strata
appendix
appendices (or appendixes, in a medical context)
vortex
vortices (or vortexes)
These rules for irregular plural nouns must simply be memorized, although it is helpful to understand the
patterns first in order to master them. We also have information on the Grammarly blog about patterns for
regular nouns.