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It's late. I need to be in bed. But I've been meaning to start this thread for over two weeks now and I keep forgetting to.
Are there any plural forms of English nouns that you find interesting or noteworthy? Or perhaps just ones that you have to give yourself a mental nudge to get the forms right?
Linguistics aside, I think it's funny to see that our 'man', singular, becomes 'men', plural. Not so hard. But what is funnier is then we have the singular 'specimen' but the plural 'specimens.' Again, Faldage & gang, this is funny to me on a superficial level. And I imagine that it will be fun to take a look at an interesting working list with my kids this fall.
Do any of you have some interesting plural forms that you could note here?
If you've already done this thread way back when, please let me know and I'll delete this one and look elsewhere. But I really would like to know some of the unusual plural forms you've found interesting--on that superficial level.
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>Do any of you have some interesting plural forms that you could note here?
Well, I like millennia, which seems to be coming under threat from millenniums. It's not so much a prescriptivist thing (I say forums, not fora), as an aesthetic thing. I just think millennia sounds nicer. A google comparison still gives millennia a huge lead, but the ums are gaining, it seems.
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Is there a singular for memorabilia?
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I'll take your word for it. Is it ever used?
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Memorabilium is a backformation from the neuter plural memorabilia. The proper singular is memorabilis. Memorabilium scores about 3:1 over memorabilis on the googlometer. The first 10 hits for memorabilium are all in Latin. Go figure.
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Thanks. Has anyone ever said, for ex., that they are going to collect a memorabilium or a memorabilis, though? WW, I haven't meant to ignore your topic and take over your thread--sorry. Connie took the one I was going to put (pppbbttt to you, C!  ), but Faldage's post reminded me of bacillus.
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I would suspect that anyone who said something like, "I got another memorabilium today," would have done so humorously.
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Meanwhile, one of my favorite exceptional plurals is monies.
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I don't recall ever seeing it, but I wonder what the plural of pi would look like. If you simply add an "s", you'd have to be very clear you weren't using French.
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not to be a spoil-sport or nothin', but isn't pi a unique, singular thing that doesn't take well to pluralization?!
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I wasn't going to say anything but I just came across this monstrosity: Technically, the plural is chiasmi, (as with octopus). ( http://www.chiasmus.com/whatischiasmus.shtml) and this thread is too good an opportunity to express my astonishment that anyone who wishes to pontificate to the public at large on linguistic matters could make such a mistake. Bingley
Bingley
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This man seems a little strange; Gurunet agrees with him on the plural, however. But what they have as an example seems to be what he calls antithesis.
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old hand
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Anglosaxons seem to be most intrigued by plural forms originating from greek or latin. But if you learn English as a second language, plurals like geese, lice or mice take more effort to memorize. (I am not going to rehash mongoose here..)
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One stem of the flower is gladiolus and OED says the plural is gladioluses. BUT I had an aunt who persisted in using gladioli and pronouncing it Gla-DIE-oh-lie. We all have eccentric relatives. God knows I try my best to keep up the tradidtion!
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Gurunet agrees with him on the plural
Of chiasmus perhaps, but his example of octopus is a little cock-eyed.
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"...isn't pi a unique, singular thing that doesn't take well to pluralization?"
Probably why I can't recall seeing it. But I can conceive of a classroom scenario wherein the math professor might say, "In this equation, you will note that the pis cancel."
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I just checked MW and will paste below what's there. The pi that we think of in math has the plural 'pis,' but another kind of pi, that can also be spelled 'pie' (not the edible pie), has the plural 'pies.'
OK, here's the scoop of pi from MW:
Main Entry: 4pi Function: noun Inflected Form(s): plural pis /'pIz/ Etymology: Middle Greek, from Greek pei, of Semitic origin; akin to Hebrew pE pe Date: 1823 1 : the 16th letter of the Greek alphabet -- see ALPHABET table 2 a : the symbol ð denoting the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter b : the ratio itself : a transcendental number having a value to eight decimal places of 3.14159265
And:
Main Entry: 1pi Variant(s): also pie /'pI/ Function: noun Inflected Form(s): plural pies Etymology: origin unknown Date: circa 1659 1 : type that is spilled or mixed 2 : a pi character or matrix
So we have two possible plurals for pi, depending upon meaning. Cool, huh?
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Has there been a revolution in mathematics while I wasn't looking? According to my machine, in ww's citation, pi is represented by the Anglo-saxon eth.
Bingley
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1 : type that is spilled or mixed Yes, that's cool! :-) Yikes--I've heard of alphabet soup, but I've never heard of alphabet pie...
Speaking of oddities--we'd never say, "Have a soup", would we? Is soup technically singular?
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Technically, unless we are referring to kinds of soup, soup is uncountable, i.e., it has no singular or plural. Uncountable nouns always take a singular verb, have no plural form, never take 'a' or 'an' and, hence the name, cannot be counted 1, 2, 3, etc.
Bingley
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we'd never say, "Have a soup", would we? - Yet someone could say "have a smoke" - and "smoke" is also unlikely to be used in plural.
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never take 'a' or 'an'
Unless they do. Also, they *do take the, as in, "Will you have the soup or the salad?"
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>and "smoke" is also unlikely to be used in plural.
You are kidding, right? "Smokes" is more common here than "cigarettes"
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My mother, 72 years old, refers to her cigarettes as her 'smokes.' And a cigarette is certainly easily countable.
However, if you were watching the smoke rise from many smokestacks, say at some sort of factory with many outlets, you'd say something like, "Look at the smoke rising today over there..." Or perhaps, "Look at all the smoke rising today..." But you wouldn't say, "Look at all the smokes rising." :)
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However, if you were watching the smoke rise from many smokestacks, say at some sort of factory with many outlets, you'd say something like, "Look at the smoke rising today over there..." Or perhaps, "Look at all the smoke rising today..." But you wouldn't say, "Look at all the smokes rising." :)
but if, instead of smoke stackes, you were looking at the smokey mist rising from mountains,the you have the Great Smokies!
i think the thing is that the verb smoke-(Do you smoke?/She smokes [/greeen] takes an s, (and do then lends the S to the smoke for a short term for cigarettes, but smoke itself is singular... we have smokey areas, or smoke filled rooms, but not a room filled with smokes, only a room filled with smokers, each of whom is adding more smoke.
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Pooh-Bah
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I can see why soup and smoke are uncountable nouns but tell me my deer, why are sheep considered uncountable?!?
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why are sheep considered uncountable?
Because you always fall asleep before you get done.
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fall asleep
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fall asleep
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In reply to:
Unless they do. Also, they *do take the, as in, "Will you have the soup or the salad?"
I never said they didn't take 'the'. It might be more precise to say words can have countable and uncountable meanings. Thus soup meaning the edible liquid is uncountable, while if 'soup' means kinds of the liquid or servings of the liquid, then it is countable.
The supermarket sells a wide variety of soups. Three soups and two salads, please.
Similarly, if 'smoke' means cigarette it is countable. If 'smoke' refers to the vapour given off by burning substances it is not.
Give us a smoke, will you? Smoke from the forest fires could be seen from many miles away.
Sheep and deer are both countable. It just so happens that the form of the singular and plural are the same.
A sheep (deer) was grazing. Six sheep (deer) were running across the field.
Bingley
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Wordwind found my post on the chiasmus site needlessly obscure, and asked for an explanation by pm. She thinks my reply might be of general interest and suggested I post it to the board. Here it is:
Sorry, I didn't mean to be obscure. Chiasmi is fine. The problem is the parallel with octopus. Chiasmos is a Greek 2nd declension noun, plural chiasmoi, Latinised and Anglicised as chiasmi. Fine. No problem. Unfortunately pous (foot -- the final element of octopus) is a 3rd declension noun. The plural is podes (think of all the pod words with foot meanings). So if one wants to use the Greek plural it would have to be octopodes. Better by far to treat it as an ordinary English noun -- octopuses.
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far better ... octopuses. Ooh, no I like octopodes better it sounds more octopus movementish to me.
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octopodes
Yeahbut®, is it OCK tuh poads, or ock TAH puh deez?
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ock TAH puh deez in the Antipodes but OCK tuh poads elsewhere
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ock TAH puh deez in the Antipodes and also for Euripedes.
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Nope, it wouldn't be "ock TAH puh deez" up here, you would have to replace that "AH" with our favourite, (almost our only) vowel, a schwa. 
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replace that "AH" with … a schwa
A *stressed schwa!?
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>A *stressed schwa!?
Sure, up here they're all stressed from being so overworked.
Aks shirley, we're known for rising intonation, and, IMHO, we don't stress that syllable. Having said the word dozens of times in the last few minutes, I'm stil convinced it's a schwa there - the word comes out like "an-tschwa-pscwha-DEEZ.
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