LingoStoriesLingoStories
🇩🇪A1

A1 German GrammarPlural Nouns

Learn how to form German plurals. German has several plural patterns including -e, -en, -er, -s, and umlaut changes. Discover the most common patterns and irregular forms.

1Plural with -e

Many German nouns form their plural by adding -e. This is common for masculine and neuter nouns. Some also add an umlaut (ä, ö, ü) to the stem vowel.

Plurals with -e

SingularPluralEnglish
der Tagdie Tageday(s)
der Hunddie Hundedog(s)
das Jahrdie Jahreyear(s)
der Stuhldie Stühlechair(s)

Examples

Die Tage sind lang.

The days are long.

Tag → Tage

Ich habe zwei Hunde.

I have two dogs.

Hund → Hunde

Die Stühle sind alt.

The chairs are old.

Stuhl → Stühle (with umlaut)

Er arbeitet seit drei Jahren.

He has been working for three years.

Jahr → Jahre

2Plural with -en / -n

The ending -en (or just -n if the word ends in -e) is very common for feminine nouns. This is one of the most frequent plural patterns in German.

Plurals with -en / -n

SingularPluralEnglish
die Fraudie Frauenwoman/women
die Blumedie Blumenflower(s)
die Zeitungdie Zeitungennewspaper(s)
die Lampedie Lampenlamp(s)

Examples

Die Frauen arbeiten hier.

The women work here.

Frau → Frauen

Die Blumen sind schön.

The flowers are beautiful.

Blume → Blumen

Ich lese zwei Zeitungen.

I read two newspapers.

Zeitung → Zeitungen

Die Lampen sind aus.

The lamps are off.

Lampe → Lampen

3Plural with -er

The -er ending is used mainly for neuter nouns and some masculine nouns. Words taking -er often add an umlaut if the stem vowel allows it (a→ä, o→ö, u→ü).

Plurals with -er

SingularPluralEnglish
das Kinddie Kinderchild/children
das Buchdie Bücherbook(s)
das Hausdie Häuserhouse(s)
der Manndie Männerman/men

Examples

Die Kinder spielen.

The children are playing.

Kind → Kinder

Ich lese viele Bücher.

I read many books.

Buch → Bücher (with umlaut)

Die Häuser sind teuer.

The houses are expensive.

Haus → Häuser (with umlaut)

Die Männer kommen.

The men are coming.

Mann → Männer (with umlaut)

4Other Plural Forms

Some nouns add -s (often foreign words), and some remain unchanged (often -er and -el endings). Nouns ending in -chen and -lein never change in plural.

Special Plural Forms

TypeSingularPluralEnglish
-s pluraldas Autodie Autoscar(s)
No changeder Lehrerdie Lehrerteacher(s)
No changedas Mädchendie Mädchengirl(s)
Umlaut onlyder Vaterdie Väterfather(s)

Examples

Die Autos sind neu.

The cars are new.

Auto → Autos (foreign word)

Die Lehrer sind nett.

The teachers are nice.

Lehrer → Lehrer (no change)

Die Mädchen lachen.

The girls laugh.

Mädchen → Mädchen (diminutive)

Die Väter arbeiten.

The fathers work.

Vater → Väter (umlaut only)