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flertalsformer

Flertalsformer, or plural forms, are the inflected forms that indicate more than one reference in a language. They can apply to nouns, pronouns, adjectives and sometimes verbs, and they are a central aspect of morphology and grammar. Plural forms signal quantity and often interact with other grammatical categories such as case, gender, or definiteness.

Plural formation uses several common methods. Suffixation adds a dedicated ending, for example -s or -es in

In English, plural forms include regular plurals like cat → cats and bus → buses, as well as

Plural systems vary widely across language families. Some require adjectives and determiners to agree in number

English.
Some
languages
use
internal
vowel
changes,
known
as
ablaut,
to
mark
plurality.
Others
rely
on
suppletion,
where
a
completely
different
stem
is
used
in
the
plural.
Some
languages
have
a
zero
plural,
where
the
same
form
is
used
for
singular
and
plural.
irregular
plurals
such
as
man
→
men
or
mouse
→
mice.
There
are
also
zero
plurals,
as
with
sheep
or
species.
Other
languages
show
more
complex
patterns.
German
nouns
may
take
endings
like
-e,
-en,
or
-er
and
may
change
the
article;
Swedish
uses
endings
such
as
-ar,
-er,
-or,
or
-n
and
may
feature
definiteness
in
the
plural
(pojkar
→
pojkarna).
with
the
noun;
others
mark
plurality
primarily
on
the
noun,
and
still
others
encode
plurality
through
word
order
or
articles.
Studying
flertalsformer
helps
illuminate
how
languages
encode
quantity,
agreement,
and
syntactic
structure.