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pluralizable

Pluralizable is an adjective used to describe a word or lexeme that can take a plural form. In linguistic terms, a word is pluralizable if a plural inflection is available in a given language, allowing it to refer to more than one entity. The notion helps explain how languages mark quantity and how phrases adjust to grammatical number.

In English, most count nouns are pluralizable by adding a suffix such as -s or -es, though

Across languages, pluralization systems vary widely. Some languages require explicit plural marking on adjectives and determiners,

In linguistics and language technology, pluralizable words are tracked in lexicons and used by algorithms for

many
change
their
stem
in
irregular
ways
(man
→
men,
child
→
children,
foot
→
feet).
Some
words
are
otherwise
not
normally
pluralized
in
everyday
usage:
information,
furniture,
and
equipment
function
as
mass
nouns
and
typically
appear
only
in
the
singular.
Others
have
identical
singular
and
plural
forms,
such
as
sheep,
species,
and
deer.
The
pluralizability
of
a
given
noun
can
also
be
influenced
by
context
and
sense;
data
is
often
treated
as
plural
in
technical
writing
but
commonly
as
a
mass
noun
in
everyday
language.
while
others
rely
on
word
order
or
counting
numerals.
Some
languages
have
no
productive
morphology
for
plural
at
all,
using
different
strategies
to
express
plurality.
parsing,
generation,
and
translation.
Pluralization
libraries
encode
regular
rules
and
irregular
exceptions
to
determine
appropriate
plural
forms
for
a
given
word
and
language.