(Redirected from Pluralia tantum)A 'plurale tantum' (plural: 'pluralia tantum') is a noun that appears only in the
plural form and does not have a
singular variant, though it may still refer to one or many of the objects it names. Many languages have pluralia tantum, such as the
English words "scissors" and "pants", or the
Swedish word ''inälvor'' "intestines".
The term for a noun which appears only in the singular form is 'singulare tantum' (plural: 'singularia tantum'), for example the English words "dust" and "wealth". Singulare tantum is defined by the ''Shorter Oxford English Dictionary'' as: "''Gram.'' A word having only a singular form; ''esp.'' a non-count noun."
[1] In the English language, such words are almost always
uncountable nouns.
See also
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English plural
References
1. ''The New Shorter Oxford English Dictionary'', 1993 edition, p2871.