Language/French/Grammar/Plural-of-Nouns
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Plural of Nouns
All nouns must be either singular or plural. Although many nouns are marked for plural in written French, few differ in singular and plural form in spoken French. Usually, number is marked in the determiner in spoken French (le/la versus les, ce/cette versus ces, mon/ma versus mes, and so on).
To fully understand how plural of nouns work in French, please take the following lessons:
Plural of Nouns (all lessons)[edit source]
Other Chapters[edit | edit source]
Videos[edit | edit source]
French Gender and Plural of Nouns - Lesson 1 - YouTube[edit | edit source]
Learn French - How To Make A Noun Plural In French - YouTube[edit | edit source]
French plural ending in X | Plural of nouns and adjectives - YouTube[edit | edit source]
How To Make A Noun Plural in French // French Grammar Course ...[edit | edit source]
Other Lessons[edit | edit source]
- Gender of countries, towns, islands, rivers, regions and states
- Demonstrative pronouns with —ci and —là
- Location of adverbs modifying verb phrases
- Use of y
- How to use half, third and quarter in French
- Position of object pronouns with devoir, pouvoir + infinitives
- Adverbs ending in —ément derived from adjectives ending in —e
- The partitive article "du", "de l'", "de la" and "des"
- Differences in the use of numbers in French and English once twice
- Cardinal Numbers — When to use figures and when to use words
- Demonstrative determiners
- se as an alternative to an English passive
- Collective nouns
- Prepositions
- The indirect object complement