Everything about Plural totally explained
Plural is a
grammatical number, typically referring to more than one of the
referent in the real world.
In the
English language, singular and
plural are the only grammatical numbers.
In English,
nouns,
pronouns, and
demonstratives
inflect for plurality. (See
English plural.) In many other languages, for example
German and the various
Romance languages,
articles and
adjectives also inflect for plurality. For example, in the English sentence "The brown cats are running", only the noun and verb are inflected; but in the German sentence "Die braunen Katzen rennen", every word (article, noun, adjective, and verb) is inflected.
In many languages, including a number of
Indo-European languages, there's also a
dual number (used for indicating two objects). Some other grammatical numbers present in various languages include
trial (for three objects) and
paucal (for a few objects). In languages with dual, trial, or paucal numbers, plural refers to numbers higher than those (for example more than two, more than three, or many). However, numbers besides singular, plural, and to a lesser extent dual, are extremely rare. Languages with
measure words such as
Chinese and
Japanese lack any significant grammatical number at all, though they're likely to have plural
personal pronouns.
Some languages distinguish between a plural and a
greater plural. A greater plural refers to an abnormally large number for the object of discussion. It should also be noted that the distinction between the paucal, the plural, and the greater plural is often relative to the type of object under discussion. For example, for oranges the paucal number might imply less than ten, whereas for the population of a country it might be used for a few hundred thousand.
The
Austronesian language
Sursurunga has singular, dual, paucal, greater paucal, and plural.
Lihir, another Austronesian language, has singular, dual, trial, paucal, and plural. These are probably the languages with the most complex grammatical number.
Languages having only a singular and plural form may still differ in their treatment of zero. For example, in English, German,
Dutch,
Italian,
Spanish and
Portuguese, the plural form is used for zero or more than one, and the singular for one thing only. By contrast, in French, the singular form is used for zero.
An interesting difference from Romance/Germanic languages is found in some
Slavic and
Baltic languages. Here, the final digits of the number determine its form. For example,
Polish has singular and plural, and a special form (paucal) for numbers where the last digit is 2, 3 or 4, (excluding endings of 12, 13 and 14). In addition,
Slovenian preserved pure dual, using it for numbers ending in 2. In
Serbo-Croatian (in addition to the paucal for numbers 2-4), several nouns have alternate forms for counting plural and collective plural (the latter being treated as a
collective noun). For example, there are two ways to say leaves:
lišće (collective) is used in "Leaves are falling from the trees", but
listovi (counting) is used in "Those are some beautiful leaves".
In English,
mass nouns and
abstract nouns have plurals in less common instances. The phrase "by the waters of Babylon" is merely poetic, but the mass noun "water" takes a plural to signify the water drawn from different sources, with different trace minerals, as in the phrase "Different waters make for different beers." Similarly, the abstract noun "physics" is usually a vast unitary concept, but in its recent meaning of computer game subroutines, a plural sense is possible for different workings of physics, though without a change in inflection: "Throughout the history of the game series, the physics have improved."
Sources
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