Home

pluriel

Pluriel is the grammatical category that marks more than one reference in nouns, pronouns, adjectives, and related words. In linguistics, it is studied alongside singular and other number forms (if present) to indicate plurality. Plural marking can be expressed morphologically, syntactically, or lexically, and some languages feature more than two numeric categories such as dual or paucal.

Etymology and scope: The term pluriel comes from Latin pluralis through the French word pluriel. It is

French specifics: In French, le pluriel is the form used for more than one item. Most nouns

Typology and cross-linguistic notes: Plural formation varies widely across languages. Some use suffixes, others alter the

See also: grammatical number, number agreement, pluralia tantum.

used
to
describe
how
a
language
marks
a
quantity
greater
than
one,
including
how
determiner
and
adjective
agreement
interact
with
a
noun
in
the
plural.
form
the
plural
by
adding
-s
to
the
singular,
and
adjectives
and
determiners
agree
in
number
with
the
noun.
Examples:
un
livre,
des
livres;
un
cheval,
des
chevaux.
French
also
has
irregular
plurals
and
special
patterns,
such
as
œil
→
yeux
and
bureau
→
bureaux,
as
well
as
nouns
that
change
more
substantially
or
remain
invariant.
Some
nouns
are
pluralia
tantum,
existing
only
in
the
plural
form
(for
example,
les
lunettes,
les
vacances).
In
addition,
article
and
adjective
forms
shift
from
le/la
to
les,
and
from
un/une
to
des
in
the
plural.
root,
and
some
rely
on
separate
words
or
noun
class
systems.
While
English
commonly
uses
-s
or
-es,
other
languages
exhibit
extensive
irregularities
or
multiple
plural
patterns.
Some
languages
even
have
fewer
or
more
numerical
distinctions
beyond
singular
and
plural.