Many nouns that have come into English from other languages continue to form their plurals according to the rules for pluralization in the source language. However, some have an English plural form in addition to, or instead of, the foreign form. In some cases, the different plural forms have different meanings or uses.
Note the following singular and plural forms.
Nouns ending in -a
- alumna: alumnae
- antenna: antennae (feelers) or antennas (aerials)
- formula: formulas or formulae
Nouns ending in -eau
- bureau: bureaus (British: bureaux)
- plateau: plateaus or plateaux
Nouns ending in -ex or -ix
- appendix: appendixes or appendices
- index: indexes (of a book) or indices (in mathematics, statistics)
- matrix: matrices
Nouns ending in -is
- analysis: analyses
- basis: bases
- crisis: crises
- ellipsis: ellipses
- hypothesis: hypotheses
- parenthesis: parentheses
Nouns ending in -on
- criterion: criteria
- phenomenon: phenomena
Nouns ending in -um
- addendum: addenda
- bacterium: bacteria
- erratum: errata
- medium: mediums or media (check dictionary for plural form to use in a given context)
- memorandum: memorandums or memoranda
- symposium: symposiums or symposia
Nouns ending in -us
- alumnus: alumni
- bus: buses
- census: censuses
- focus: focuses or foci (not focusses, which is a verb form)
- nucleus: nuclei
- surplus: surpluses
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