PLURAL OF NOUNS
In general, for the plural of nouns in English, just add the letter S:
notebook – notebooks
meeting – meetings
professional – professionals
But there are other rules to change the nouns to the plural form. Let’s check them.
Nouns ending in SH, CH, SS, X and Z
Add ES for nouns ending with letters SH, CH, SS, X, and Z:
brush – brushes
watch – watches
kiss – kisses
fox – foxes
buzz – buzzes
Pay attention!
Add just S for some nouns ending in CH, but with /k/ sound.
stomach – stomachs
monarch – monarchs
Nouns ending in O
Nouns ending in O can add either S or ES in the plural, and some can be spelled in both ways.
General rule: just add S for nouns ending in O and those which have a vowel before the final O always just add S:
piano – pianos
zoo – zoos
photo – photos
kilo – kilos
studio – studios
Some common nouns ending in O that are always spelled with ES in the plural:
buffalo – buffaloes
echo – echoes
hero – heroes
domino – dominoes
mosquito – mosquitoes
tomato – tomatoes
potato – potatoes
veto – vetoes
There are some nouns ending in O that can be spelled with S or ES in the plural form:
cargo – cargos or cargoes
ghetto – ghettos or ghettoes
mango – mangos or mangoes
volcano – volcanos or volcanoes
memento – mementos or mementoes
tuxedo – tuxedos or tuxedoes
flamingo – flamingos or flamingoes
Nouns ending in Y
A noun ending in a consonant and then Y makes the plural by dropping the Y and adding IES.
country – countries
dictionary – dictionaries
city – cities
The nouns ending in a vowel and then Y just add S.
day – days
key – keys
guy – guys
Nouns ending in F or FE
Usually for nouns ending in F or FE just add S
chief – chiefs
safe – safes
proof – proofs
But there are some nouns ending in F or FE that make the plural by dropping the F or FE and adding VES:
loaf – loaves
life – lives
leaf – leaves
knife – knives
half – halves
elf – elves
calf – calves
self – selves
sheaf – sheaves
shelf – shelves
thief – thieves
wife – wives
wolf – wolves
Pay attention!
Some nouns ending in F or FE can have their plural both ways (with VES or S)
dwarf – dwarfs or dwarves
hoof – hoofs or hooves
scarf – scarfs or scarves
staff – staffs or staves
wharf – wharfs or wharves
Some nouns have the same form in the singular and in the plural.
sheep
fish
fruit
means
species
series
There are some irregular noun plurals that don’t follow any rules
foot– feet
mouse – mice
tooth – teeth
child – children
man – men
woman – women
person – people
Plurals of Foreign Nouns
Some words of Latin or Greek origin have different rules for their formation in the plural.
criterion – criteria
phenomenon – phenomena
demon – demons
electron – electrons
neutron – neutrons
proton – protons
analysis – analyses
basis – bases
crisis – crises
hypothesis – hypotheses
bacterium – bacteria
curriculum – curricula