plural$61762$ - translation to ελληνικό
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plural$61762$ - translation to ελληνικό

ENGLISH BORROWINGS FROM LATIN AND GREEK
Virus (plural); Plural of "virus"; Plural of 'virus'; Plural of virus; Plural of platypus; Plural of octopus; I plural

plural      
n. πληθυντικός, πλειονότης, πλειοψηφία
collective noun         
COLLECTION OF THINGS TAKEN AS A WHOLE
Collective nouns/All sorted by collective term; Lists of collective nouns; Nouns of assemblage; English collective noun; Collective plural; Term of Venery; Terms of Venery; Terms of venery; Term of venery; English collective nouns; Group noun; Collective Nouns; Collective nouns; Noun of assimilation; Collective singular; English collective nouns of venery; Noun of multitude; Collective plurals
n. περιληπτικό ουσιαστικό

Ορισμός

plural
plural
¦ abbreviation
1. (also Pl.) place.
2. plate (referring to illustrations in a book).
3. chiefly Military platoon.
4. plural.
--------
plural
¦ adjective
1. Grammar (of a word or form) denoting more than one, or (in languages with dual number) more than two.
more than one in number.
2. containing several diverse elements: a plural society.
¦ noun Grammar a plural word or form.
?the plural number.
Derivatives
plurally adverb
Origin
ME: from OFr. plurel or L. pluralis, from plus, plur- 'more'.

Βικιπαίδεια

Plural form of words ending in -us

In English, the plural form of words ending in -us, especially those derived from Latin, often replaces -us with -i. There are many exceptions, some because the word does not derive from Latin, and others due to custom (e.g., campus, plural campuses). Conversely, some non-Latin words ending in -us and Latin words that did not have their Latin plurals with -i form their English plurals with -i. Some words' plurals end in -i even though they are not Latin, or that is not the Latin plural, e.g., octopi is sometimes used as a plural for octopus (the standard English plural is octopuses). Prescriptivists consider these forms incorrect, but descriptivists may simply describe them as a natural evolution of language.

Some English words of Latin origin do not commonly take the Latin plural, but rather the regular English plurals in -(e)s: campus, bonus, and anus; while others regularly use the Latin forms: radius (radii) and alumnus (alumni). Still others may use either: corpus (corpora or corpuses), formula (formulae in technical contexts, formulas otherwise), index (indices mostly in technical contexts, indexes otherwise).