Saturday, September 28, 2013

Wiktionary - Recent changes [en]: plural

Wiktionary - Recent changes [en]
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plural
Sep 29th 2013, 00:05, by Ivan Štambuk

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==English==

 

==English==

 

{{wikipedia}}

 

{{wikipedia}}

  +
  +

===Alternative forms===

  +

* {{qualifier|abbreviation, grammar}}: {{l|en|pl.}}

   
 

===Etymology===

 

===Etymology===


Latest revision as of 00:05, 29 September 2013

See also: Plural, and plurál

English[edit]

Wikipedia has an article on:

Wikipedia

Alternative forms[edit]

  • (abbreviation, grammar): pl.

Etymology[edit]

From Middle English plurelle, from Old French plurel ("plural"), from Latin pluralis ("of or belonging to more than one, belonging to many", adjective), from plus, pluris ("more") + -alis.

Pronunciation[edit]

Adjective[edit]

plural (comparative more plural, superlative most plural)

  1. Consisting of or containing more than one of something.
    • Shakespeare
      Plural faith, which is too much by one.
  2. (comparable) Pluralistic.
    • 1987, Mircea Eliade, Charles J. Adams editor, The Encyclopedia of religion, volume 3:
      Although the nation was far more plural than Canada in the number of its Christian groups
    • 2006, Suisheng Zhao, Debating political reform in China: rule of law vs. democratization, page 29:
      The Hong Kong and Singapore markets are way more "plural" than most Western economies, but they have not led to pluralistic politics.
    • 2007, Lachelle Renee Hannickel, From cultural transgressions to literary transformations: ..., page 195:
      History is perhaps more plural than traditionally imagined, leaving room for more groups to express their story.
    • 2009, Pille Valk, Teenagers' perspectives on the role of religion in their lives, ..., page 281:
      Generally the girls tend to perceive their social world as somewhat more plural than boys do. Several of these questions reveal that there are more boys (61%) than girls (39%) who 'do not know' about the religion of others
    • 2011, Harald E. Braun; Edward Vallance, The Renaissance Conscience, page 50:
      Yet More's conscience was responding to a world just a little more plural than the world he was born in
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Synonyms[edit]

Antonyms[edit]

Translations[edit]

more than one

Noun[edit]

plural (plural plurals)

  1. (grammar): a word in the form in which it potentially refers to something other than one person or thing; and other than two things if the language has a dual form.

Usage notes[edit]

  • Many languages have singular and plural forms for one item or more than one item. Some have a singular form for one, dual form for two, trial form for three, paucal form for several, and plural for more than two (e.g., Arabic, Fijian).
  • While the plural form generally refers to two or more persons or things, that is not always the case. The plural form is often used for zero persons or things, for fractional things in a quantity greater than one, and for people or things when the quantity is unknown.
  • In English, the plural is most often formed simply by adding the letter "s" to the end of a noun, e.g. apple/apples. There are many exceptions, however, such as echo/echoes, mouse/mice, child/children, deer/deer (same word), etc.

Antonyms[edit]

Translations[edit]

word in plural form

See also[edit]


Catalan[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Latin plurale

Adjective[edit]

plural m, f (masculine and feminine plural plurals)

  1. plural

Noun[edit]

plural m (plural plurals)

  1. plural

Adjective[edit]

plural m (feminine plurale, masculine plural pluraux, feminine plural plurales)

  1. plural, large

Related terms[edit]


Galician[edit]

Noun[edit]

plural m, f (plural plurais)

  1. plural

Maltese[edit]

Etymology[edit]

EB1911 - Volume 01 - Page 001 - 1.svg This entry lacks etymological information. If you are familiar with the origin of this term, please add it to the page as described here.

Pronunciation[edit]

Noun[edit]

plural m

  1. (grammar) plural

Occitan[edit]

Noun[edit]

plural m (plural plurals)

  1. plural

Serbo-Croatian[edit]

Pronunciation[edit]

  • IPA(key): /plǔraːl/
  • Hyphenation: plu‧ral

Noun[edit]

plùrāl m (Cyrillic spelling плу̀ра̄л)

  1. (uncountable) plural

Declension[edit]

    declension of plural

singular plural
nominative plùrāl plurali
genitive plurála plurala
dative pluralu pluralima
accusative plural plurale
vocative plurale plurali
locative pluralu pluralima
instrumental pluralom pluralima

Synonyms[edit]


Spanish[edit]

Adjective[edit]

plural m, f (plural plurales)

  1. plural, multiple

Noun[edit]

plural m (plural plurales)

  1. (grammar) plural

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