Difference between revisions of "Language/Pular/Grammar/Plurals"
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(Created page with "<div style="font-size:300%;"> Plurals in Pular</div> __TOC__ In English, most plurals are formed by adding an s to the end of the word (one cat, two cats). There are a few r...") |
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[[File:Pular-Language-PolyglotClub.png|thumb]] | |||
<div class="pg_page_title"> Plurals in Pular</div> | |||
In English, most plurals are formed by adding an s to the end of the word (one cat, two cats). There are a few rules beyond that (one penny, two pennies) and a handful of irregularities (one mouse, two mice). In Pular, plurals are very irregular; the whole word changes, and there are no easy rules—although there are patterns that will soon become apparent. Our advice is just to memorize the plural form of each noun along with the singular, and eventually you’ll get the hang of it. The table to the right gives a sampler of plural forms. | In English, most plurals are formed by adding an s to the end of the word (one cat, two cats). There are a few rules beyond that (one penny, two pennies) and a handful of irregularities (one mouse, two mice). In Pular, plurals are very irregular; the whole word changes, and there are no easy rules—although there are patterns that will soon become apparent. Our advice is just to memorize the plural form of each noun along with the singular, and eventually you’ll get the hang of it. The table to the right gives a sampler of plural forms. | ||
[[File:Pular-Language-Plural-PolyglotClub.jpg]] | |||
<span link>Take some time to dive into these other pages after completing this lesson:</span> [[Language/Pular/Grammar/Generic-noun-forms|Generic noun forms]], [[Language/Pular/Grammar/Personal-pronouns|Personal pronouns]] & [[Language/Pular/Grammar/Verbs|Verbs]]. | |||
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==Source== | ==Source== | ||
http://www.ibamba.net/pular/manual.pdf | http://www.ibamba.net/pular/manual.pdf | ||
==Other Lessons== | |||
* [[Language/Pular/Grammar/Generic-noun-forms|Generic noun forms]] | |||
* [[Language/Pular/Grammar/Personal-pronouns|Personal pronouns]] | |||
* [[Language/Pular/Grammar/Verbs|Verbs]] | |||
* [[Language/Pular/Grammar/Imperative|Imperative]] | |||
* [[Language/Pular/Grammar/Possessive-pronouns|Possessive pronouns]] | |||
<span links></span> | |||
Latest revision as of 13:08, 27 March 2023
Plurals in Pular
In English, most plurals are formed by adding an s to the end of the word (one cat, two cats). There are a few rules beyond that (one penny, two pennies) and a handful of irregularities (one mouse, two mice). In Pular, plurals are very irregular; the whole word changes, and there are no easy rules—although there are patterns that will soon become apparent. Our advice is just to memorize the plural form of each noun along with the singular, and eventually you’ll get the hang of it. The table to the right gives a sampler of plural forms.
Take some time to dive into these other pages after completing this lesson: Generic noun forms, Personal pronouns & Verbs.
Source[edit | edit source]
http://www.ibamba.net/pular/manual.pdf
Other Lessons[edit | edit source]
