Singular noun-names one person, place, thing, or
idea; denoting or referring to just one person or
thing.
Plural noun-names more than one person, place,
thing, or idea; denoting more than one, or more than
two.
There are a few basic rules to remember when it
comes to turning a singular noun into a plural noun.
1. Most singular nouns need an 's' at the end to
become plural.
These are the easy ones. You can just add an 's' to
alien, taco, or skateboard, for example, and you
instantly have aliens, tacos, and skateboards.
There's a second rule for nouns that end with certain
letters.
2. Singular nouns ending in 's', 'ss', 'sh', 'ch', 'x', or
'z' need an 'es' at the end to become plural.
So, if you have a secretive, alcoholic octopus
drinking wine from a glass behind a bush, and you
decide that one of those just isn't enough, you'd
have two octopuses drinking from glasses behind
bushes.
The same would be true for a crutch, a box, and a
blintz, which would become crutches, boxes, and
blintzes.
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Note that some singular nouns ending in 's' or 'z'
require that you double the 's' or 'z' before adding an
'es'. For example, a really bad day might involve
you having not one pop quiz, but two pop quizzes.
Irregular Plural Nouns
And then, there are a lot of nouns with weird rules
for becoming plural.
3. Some nouns are the same in both their singular
and plural forms.
So I can have one deer or two deer - or one sheep or
two sheep. Or I might be hooked on one T.V. series
or two T.V. series.
4. Some nouns ending in 'f' require that you change
the 'f' to a 'v' and then add an 'es' at the end to make
them plural.
For example, you might have not just one elf
sneaking into your house on Christmas night, but
two elves.
The English language loves to have exceptions,
though, so the houses in your neighborhood have
roofs, not rooves, and your wacky old uncle has
crazy beliefs, not believes.
5. Nouns that end in 'y' often require that you
change the 'y' to an 'i', and then add an 'es' at the
end to make them plural.
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Singular nouns form the plural by adding -s.
 SINGULAR NOUN               PLURAL NOUN
 BOAT                        BOATS
 HOUSE                       HOUSES
 CAT                         CATS
 RIVER                       RIVERS
Singular noun ending in s, x, z, ch, sh makes the
plural by adding-es.
 SINGULAR NOUN               PLURAL NOUN
 BUS                         BUSES
 WISH                        WISHES
 PITCH                       PITCHES
 BOX                         BOXES
                         3
Singular noun ending in a consonant and
then y makes the plural by dropping the y and
adding-ies.
 SINGULAR NOUN               PLURAL NOUN
 PENNY                       PENNIES
 SPY                         SPIES
 BABY                        BABIES
 CITY                        CITIES
 DAISY                       DAISIES
                         4
There are some irregular noun plurals. The most
common ones are listed below.
 SINGULAR NOUN              PLURAL NOUN
 WOMAN                      WOMEN
 MAN                        MEN
 CHILD                      CHILDREN
 TOOTH                      TEETH
 FOOT                       FEET
 PERSON                     POEPLE
 LEAF                       LEAVES
                        5
SINGULAR NOUN       PLURAL NOUN
MOUSE               MICE
GOOSE               GEESE
HALF                HALVES
KNIFE               KNIVES
WIFE                WIVES
LIFE                LIVES
ELF                 ELVES
                6
SINGULAR NOUN       PLURAL NOUN
LOAF                LOAVES
POTATO              POTATOES
TOMATO              TOMATOES
CACTUS              CACTI
FOCUS               FOCI
FUNGUS              FUNGI
NUCLEUS             NUCLEI
                7
SINGULAR NOUN       PLURAL NOUN
ANALYSIS            ANALYSES
DISGNOSIS           DIAGNOSES
OASIS               OASES
THESIS              THESES
CRISIS              CRISES
PHENOMENON          PHENOMENA
CRITERION           CRITERIA
SYLLABUS            SYLLABI/SYLLABUSES
DATUM               DATA