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irrégulières

Irrégulières is the feminine plural form of the French adjective irrégulier. In French grammar, it is used to describe forms that do not follow regular patterns of conjugation, declension, or inflection. The full set of forms is irrégulier (masculine singular), irrégulière (feminine singular), irréguliers (masculine plural), and irrégulières (feminine plural). The expression formes irrégulières is common when discussing anomalies in a word’s morphology.

In practice, irrégulières most often refer to irregular verbs, known as verbes irréguliers. French contains many

Irrégulières can also describe irregular nouns or adjectives whose plural or feminine forms do not follow

Linguistically, irregularities arise from historical sound changes, analogy, or borrowing from other languages. In language descriptions,

verbs
that
do
not
follow
standard
endings
in
one
or
more
tenses,
such
as
être,
avoir,
aller,
faire,
venir.
Learners
must
memorize
their
conjugations
rather
than
rely
on
regular
patterns.
regular
rules.
For
nouns,
irregular
plurals
occur
in
a
variety
of
words,
such
as
œil
becoming
yeux.
For
adjectives,
some
words
have
non-standard
feminine
forms
or
plural
agreements,
though
many
adjectives
follow
regular
rules.
labeling
a
form
as
irrégulière
helps
categorize
deviations
from
productive
morphological
patterns
and
guides
analysis
and
teaching.
The
concept
is
used
across
languages,
though
the
specific
forms
of
irregularities
vary
by
language.