How to do the plural of nouns in Italian language
It’s not very easy to do the plural form of nouns in Italian. Normally, when nouns end in -o (in general it’s masculine) the plural is -i; and when nouns end in -a the plural form is -e, example:
il libro (masc. sing.) - i libri (masc. plur.) -o >-i
la casa (fem. sing.) - le case (fem. plur.) -a> -e
When a noun ends in -e (in this case it can be masculine or feminine), it changes in plural in -i, example:
il ristorante (masc. sing.) - i ristoranti (masch. plur.) -e> -i
la madre (fem. sing.) - le madri (fem. plur.) -e> -i
In addition to this we have many special cases, one of this, that I consider very special, is the group of nouns ( luckily it’s a very little group!) that in singular is masculine and in plural becomes feminine, example:
No tags for this post.il braccio (masc. sing.) - le braccia (fem. plur.)
il ginocchio (masc. sing.) - le ginocchia (fem. plur.)
il labbro (masc. sing.) - le labbra (fem. plur.)
l’orecchio (masc. sing.) - le orecchie (fem. plur.)
l’uovo (masc.sing.) - le uova (fem. plur.)
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November 8th, 2007 at 9:59 am
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