Plurals - The Free Dictionary
www.thefreedictionary.com › PluralsPluralsof nouns are used to indicate when there is more than one person, place, animal, or thing. The normal method for making nouns plural is to add an “-s” at the end of the noun. For example: one boy – two boys. one girl – two girls. one pen – two pens. one pencil – two pencils. one prize – two prizes.
English plurals - Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_pluralsThe plural morpheme in English is a sibilant suffixed to the end of most nouns. Regular English plurals fall into three classes, depending upon the sound that ends the singular form: In English, there are six sibilant consonants, namely /s z ʃ ʒ tʃ dʒ/. Where a singular noun ends in a sibilant sound, the plural is formed by adding /ɪz/ or /əz/ (in some transcription systems, this is abbreviated as /ᵻz/). The spelling adds -es, or -s if the singular already ends in -e:
Plural - Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PluralCertain nouns do not form plurals. A large class of such nouns in many languages is that of uncountable nouns, representing mass or abstract concepts such as air, information, physics. However, many nouns of this type also have countable meanings or other contexts in which a plural can be used; for example water can take a plural when it means water from a particular source (different waters make for different beers) and in expressions like by the waters of Babyl…