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A study on the Nominal Plural forms in early middle English
Author(s) -
Dr.Siraj Ahmad Rather
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
international journal of research in informative science application and techniques
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2581-5814
DOI - 10.46828/ijrisat.v1i1.18
Subject(s) - plural , middle english , noun , linguistics , history , point (geometry) , old english , mathematics , philosophy , geometry
Nominal plural forms were not common in old English. Old English noun usually inflected as a strong neuter, the plural form being win. The s – form in the text is perhaps one of the earliest instances of transfer to –s and comes straight down to later periods, seeing that the s – form is the only accepted plural. The second point is s – ending extends to historically unexpected classes of nouns. Examples are burgas, degles, feondas, Rondas, hoses etc. The number of nouns that transferred to – s may not be very large, but the examples show that this is a preliminary stage to the further development in early Middle English. The present nominal plural forms describe how the old English changed into early Middle English.

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