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English plurals
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==== Plurals in ''-(e)n'' ==== The plurals of a few nouns are formed from the singular by adding ''-n'' or ''-en'', stemming from the Old English weak declension. Only the following three are commonly found: {{block indent|{{wikitable |ox||oxen||(particularly when referring to a team of draft (draught) animals, sometimes ''oxes'' in nonstandard [[American English]]){{citation needed|date=November 2023}} |- |child||children||(only possible plural; originated as a [[double plural]], with ''-en'' added to [[Old English]] plural ''cildra/cildru'', which also led to the archaic plural ''childer'' as in ''[[Childermas]]'', occasionally still encountered in Ireland). |- |brother||brethren||(archaic as plural of ''brother'' meaning a male sibling, but often seen as plural of ''brother'' meaning a member of a [[religious congregation]] or [[fraternal organization]];<ref>[http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/brethren Dictionary.com entry for "brother"].</ref> originated as a [[double plural]], with ''-en'' added to [[Early Middle English]] ''brother'') }}}} As noted, the word "children" comes from an earlier form "childer". There were formerly a few other words like this: eyre/eyren (eggs), lamber/lambren (lambs), and calver/calveren (calves). An interesting example may be found embedded in the name of the London parish of [[Clerkenwell]], which derives its name from being the Clerks' Well associated with the [[Clerkenwell Priory]] of the [[Knights Hospitaller]]. The following ''-(e)n'' plurals are found in dialectal, rare, or archaic usage: {{block indent|{{wikitable |bee||been|| (dialectal, Ireland) |- |cow||kine||(archaic/regional; actually earlier plural "kye" [cf. Scots "kye"β"cows"] plus ''-en'' suffix, forming a [[double plural]]) |- |eye||eyen||(rare, found in some regional dialects, used by [[Shakespeare]]) |- |shoe||shoon||(rare/dialectal) |- |house||housen||(rare/dialectal, used by [[Rudyard Kipling]] in ''[[Puck of Pook's Hill]]'') |- |hose||hosen||(rare/archaic, used in [[King James Version]] of the Bible) |- |knee||kneen||(archaic/obsolete) |- |tree||treen||(archaic/obsolete, used by [[William Browne (poet)|William Browne]]) |- |aurochs||aurochsen||(alternative plural, also ''aurochs'') }}}} The word ''box'', referring to a computer, is sometimes pluralized humorously to ''boxen'' in [[Hacker culture|hacker subculture]], by analogy to ''oxen''.<ref>{{Cite web |title=boxen |url=http://catb.org/jargon/html/B/boxen.html |access-date=2025-03-12 |website=catb.org}}</ref> In the same context, multiple [[VAX]] computers are sometimes called ''Vaxen,'' particularly if operating as a cluster. Multiple Unix systems are sometimes referred to as ''Unix boxen,'' or may be called ''Unices'' along the [[#Irregular plurals from Latin and Greek|Latin model]].<ref>{{cite book|last=Raymond|first=Eric|title=The New Hacker's Dictionary|year=1993|chapter=How Jargon Works|quote=But note that 'Unixen' and 'Twenexen' are never used. It has been suggested that this is because '-ix' and '-ex' are sometimes Latin singular endings that attract a Latinate plural.|page=12|bibcode=1993nhsd.book.....R}}</ref>
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