Singular and plural One of the simplest number distinctions a language can make is singular and plural. Singular denotes exactly one referent, while plural denotes more than one referent. For example, in English: •
dog (singular, one) •
dogs (plural, two or more) To mark number, English has different singular and plural forms for nouns and verbs (in the third person): "my dog watch
es television" (singular) and "my dog
s watch television" (plural). and
Onondaga marks number on verbs but not nouns.
Latin has different singular and plural forms for nouns, verbs,
and adjectives, in contrast to English where adjectives do not change for number.
Tundra Nenets can mark singular and plural on nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs, and
postpositions. The most common part of speech to show a number distinction is pronouns. An example of a personal pronoun system distinguishing singular and plural is that of
Wayoró:
Dual As the singular denotes exactly one item, the dual number denotes exactly two items. For example, in
Camsá: • "dog" (singular) • "two dogs" (dual) • "dogs" (plural) In languages with a singular/dual/plural paradigm, the exact meaning of plural depends on whether the dual is obligatory or facultative (optional). In contrast to English and other singular/plural languages where plural means two or more, in languages with an obligatory dual, plural strictly means three or more. This is the case for
Sanskrit,
North Mansi, and
Alutiiq. In languages with a facultative dual, two of something can be referred to using either the dual or the plural, and so plural means two or more. This is the case for modern Arabic dialects, at least some
Inuktitut dialects, and
Yandruwandha. In some languages, the dual is obligatory in certain cases but facultative in others. In
Slovene, it is obligatory for pronouns but facultative for nouns. In
Comanche, it is obligatory when referring to humans, facultative for other animate nouns, and rarely used for inanimate nouns. There are also languages where use of the dual number is more restricted than singular and plural. In the possessive noun forms of
Northern Sámi, the possessor can be in the dual number, but the noun possessed can only be singular or plural. Pronouns are the only part of speech with a dual form in some
Polynesian languages, including
Samoan,
Tuvaluan, and
Māori. In
Maltese, the dual only exists for about 30 specific nouns, of which it is obligatory for only eight (hour, day, week, month, year, once, hundred, and thousand). Words that can take a facultative dual in Maltese include egg, branch, tear, and wicker basket. In
Mezquital Otomi, the dual can only be used by an adult male speaking to another adult male. Dual number existed in all nouns and adjectives of
Proto-Indo-European around 4000 BCE, and was inherited in some form in many of its
prehistoric,
protohistoric,
ancient, and
medieval descendents. Only rarely has it persisted in
Indo-European languages to the modern day. It survived in
Proto-Germanic in the first and second person pronouns, where it was then inherited by
Old English,
Old High German,
Old Low German,
Early Old Swedish,
Old Norwegian,
Old Icelandic, and
Gothic. It continued in Icelandic until the 1700s, some dialects of
Faroese until at least the late 1800s, and some dialects of
North Frisian through the 1900s. From
Proto-Greek it entered
Ancient Greek, and from
Proto-Indo-Iranian it entered Sanskrit. Indo-European languages that have long ago lost the dual still sometimes have residual traces of it, such as the English distinctions
both vs.
all,
either vs.
any, and
neither vs.
none. The Norwegian , cognate with English
both, has further evolved to be able to refer to more than two items, as in , literally "both apples, pears, and grapes."
Trial The trial number denotes exactly three items. For example, in
Awa: • "dog" (singular) • "two dogs" (dual) • "three dogs" (trial) • "dogs" (plural) It is rare for a language to mark the trial on nouns, and some sources even claim that trial marking on nouns does not exist. However, it has been recorded for a few languages; besides Awa,
Arabana,
Urama, and
Angaataha have trial number. It is much more common for a language to have trial pronouns,
Tolai,
Raga, and
Wamesa. A minimal example is
Nukna, which has only a single trial pronoun, , which can be either second or third person. The trial may also be marked on verbs, such as in
Lenakel. While the dual can be obligatory or facultative, according to
Greville Corbett there are no known cases of an obligatory trial, so the trial might always be facultative. However, languages may have both a facultative dual and a facultative trial, like in Larike, or an obligatory dual and a facultative trial, like in
Ngan'gi. Most languages with a trial are in the Austronesian family, and most non-Austronesian languages with a trial are nearby in Oceania. The latter category includes the Austronesian-influenced
English creole languages of
Tok Pisin,
Bislama, and
Pijin. In Australia, the trial can also be found in
Aboriginal languages of many different language families. In Indonesia, trial pronouns are common in the storytelling of
Abun, a possible language isolate. In the Solomon Islands, trial pronouns are used very frequently in
Touo, either a
Central Solomon language or a language isolate. As a result, bilingual speakers of Touo and Pijin will use trial pronouns a lot more commonly in Pijin than other speakers, for whom the trial is usually a lot less common than the dual. A very rare example of a spoken language with the trial (in both pronouns and verbs) outside of Oceania is
Muklom Tangsa, spoken in northeast India.
Paucal The paucal number represents 'a few', a small inexactly numbered group of items. For example, in
Motuna: • "dog" (singular) • "two dogs" (dual) • "a few dogs" (paucal) • "dogs" (plural) Almost all languages with a paucal also have a dual. Nouns in
Mocoví only have singular, paucal, and plural. The pronouns in
Mussau and
Lihir have dual, trial, and paucal. The lower bound of the paucal is usually defined by what other number categories exist in the language. In singular/paucal/plural paradigms, use of the paucal begins at two, but with the addition of the dual, the paucal begins at three. There is usually no exact upper bound on how many paucal refers to, and its approximate range depends on both language and context. It has been recorded as going up to about 5 in
Warndarrang, about 6 in
Baiso, and about 10 or 15 in
Murrinh-patha. In
Paamese, a major factor is relative group size compared to the plural, such that even though the paucal generally means 12 or fewer, a group of 2,000 people may be referred to in the paucal when contrasted with a group of 100,000 referred to in the plural. Much like the dual, it is crosslinguistically variable which words and parts of speech may be marked with the paucal. Baiso has the paucal only for nouns and not pronouns, In
Meryam Mir, the paucal is mostly marked on the verbs.
Avar has the paucal for only about 90 specific nouns, including brush, spade, snake, and daughter-in-law (the only kin term that can take the paucal in Avar).
Takivatan Bunun has a paucal only in its distal demonstratives used in reference to people. It is common for former trials to evolve in meaning to become paucals, and many Austronesian languages have paucal markers that are etymologically derived from the numeral three, indicating the old usage. It is less common for duals to evolve into paucals, but this has been observed in some dialects of Arabic. Paucals that are etymologically trials are sometimes incorrectly described as being trials. For example, trial pronouns were once described as being found in all the Kiwaian languages, but it is now recognized that many actually have a paucal instead. Linguist Michael Cysouw has suggested that
most languages reported to have trials in fact have mislabelled paucals, and that true trials are very rare. Similar things have been said about trial pronouns in Larike and
Anejom̃.
Russian has what has variably been called paucal numerals, the count form, the adnumerative, or the genitive of quantification. When a noun in the nominative case has a numeral added to quantify it, the noun becomes genitive singular with 2, 3, or 4, but genitive plural with 5 or above. Many linguists have described these as paucal constructions. However, some have disagreed on the grounds that a Russian noun cannot be declined to stand by itself and mean anywhere between 2 and 4. Similar constructions can be found in other
Slavic languages, including
Polish,
Serbo-Croatian, and
Slovene. Because Slovene also has a regular dual, there is a four-way distinction of nouns being singular with 1, dual with 2, plural with 3 or 4, and genitive plural with 5 or more.
Greater paucal The greater paucal number is a larger paucal category, for an inexactly numbered group that is larger in size than a smaller paucal. It can be found in the pronouns of the Austronesian language of
Sursurunga, which exhibit a five-way distinction described as singular, dual, paucal, greater paucal, and plural. The Sursurunga paucal is used for smaller groups, usually of about three or four, or for nuclear families of any size. The Sursurunga greater paucal is used for groups of four or more (and must be used instead of the plural for a group of two or more dyads). There is thus some overlap between the two groups; a family of four can be referred to in Sursurunga by either of the paucals. This distinction is found both in Sursurunga's personal pronouns and in two different sets of possessive pronouns, one for edible things and one for non-edible things.
Quadral The quadral number denotes exactly four items. Apparent examples of its use are almost entirely confined to pronouns, and specifically those in the languages of Oceania or in
sign languages. It has been contested whether the quadral truly exists in natural language; some linguists have rejected it as an extant category, while others have accepted it. Some languages that have previously been described as having a quadral, like Sursurunga, have since been reanalyzed as having a paucal instead. Bislama, and Pijin. However, while these are grammatically possible, they are rare, and plural forms are almost always used in their place. Many different sign languages have been explicitly described as having quadral pronoun forms.
Estonian Sign Language has even been described as having the quadral for nouns.
Marshallese has been said to have the quadral as a regular feature in its pronoun system. While the apparent Marshallese quadral can mean exactly four, it also has an alternate rhetorical use in speeches to larger groups in order to impart a sense of individual intimacy. According to
Greville Corbett, this means it is better classified as a paucal. However, there is not consensus that this alternate use means Marshallese does not truly have a quadral; the final 2016 reference grammar of Marshallese by
Byron W. Bender, a linguist with expertise in the language, still refers to it as having a quadral.
Kove has been recorded as having a similar pronoun system as Marshallese, with one addition: the plural (2+) is split between two categories, one for members of the same family and one for members of different families, creating a seven-way distinction. A few other languages have also been claimed to have quadral pronouns.
Robert Blust and others have said they exist in some of the Austronesian
Kenyah languages, specifically the highland Lepoʼ Sawa dialect spoken in
Long Anap. There seems to be no other published sources of info on this dialect's pronouns, and an investigation into the lowland Lebo’ Vo’ dialect has revealed a paucal instead of a quadral. Outside the Austronesian family,
Abun storytelling reportedly frequently contains quadral pronouns in addition to trial ones. In some Austronesian languages with a singular/dual/trial/plural pronoun system, the plural forms are etymologically related to the number four. This has led to suggestions or assertions that historically a true quadral did exist, but it has since morphed into a plural form. It has thus been hypothesized that the quadral existed in
Proto-Oceanic Quintal The quintal number denotes exactly five items. Apparent examples of its use can mostly only be found in pronouns of sign languages. Like the quadral, its existence has been contested, and only some classifications accept it. Like trial and quadral forms, rare quintal forms of pronouns have been said to be attested in Tok Pisin Linguist Raquel Veiga Busto has argued they do not equally apply to
Catalan Sign Language, and has applied the terms
quadral and
quintal to the language's pronouns for convenience without taking an official stance as to whether they are grammatical number or numeral incorporation. A third model is to categorize the apparent trial/quadral/quintal forms as "cardinal plurals", or forms of the grammatical plural number where the number of people is specified. Other authors have treated these concepts as perfectly equivalent, referring to pronoun numeral incorporation while still applying the terms
quadral and
quintal.
Israeli Sign Language theoretically has the grammatical ability to incorporate numerals up to ten into pronouns.
Greater plural Greater plural is a number larger than and beyond plural. In various forms across different languages, it has also been called the global plural, the remote plural, the plural of abundance, the unlimited plural, and the superplural. For example, in
Tswana: • "dog" (singular) • "dogs" (plural) • "a very large number of dogs" (greater plural) The greater plural may also be a component of larger number systems. Nouns in
Barngarla have a four-way distinction of singular, dual, plural, and greater plural. A different four-way distinction of singular, paucal, plural, and greater plural can be found in some verbs of
Hualapai. A more complex system is found in
Mele-Fila: pronouns distinguish singular, dual, plural, and greater plural, but articles attached to nouns distinguish singular, paucal, and plural. The result is that for full sentences, there is a combined five-way distinction of singular, dual, paucal, plural, and greater plural. Singular and plural have straightforward number agreements, whereas dual has dual pronouns but paucal articles, paucal has plural pronouns but paucal articles, and greater plural has greater plural pronouns but plural articles. The exact meaning of and terminology for the greater plural differs between languages. In some languages like
Miya, it represents a large number of something, and has been called the plural of abundance. In other languages like
Kaytetye, it can refer to all of something in existence, and has been called the global plural. Like some other grammatical numbers, languages also vary as to which cases the greater plural may be used in. The greater plural is more common in nouns than in pronouns. Oppositely, Mokilese has the greater plural in pronouns but not nouns.
Chamacoco has the greater plural only in first person inclusive pronouns, second person pronouns, and first person inclusive verb inflections.
Tigre has the greater plural only in a single word, , which means a large number of deer. • "dog" (singular) • "dogs" (plural) • "very many dogs" (greater plural) • "very many dogs indeed, so many one cannot count them" (greatest plural) A similar system is found in
Banyun, where the greater plural represents unlimitedness, and the greatest plural represents "a higher degree of unlimitedness". There does not appear to be any language with three such cuts, and so no language with three paucal categories and an "even greater paucal". Because they are inexactly defined, the existence of multiple plural categories may blur the line between paucal and plural. For example, Mele-Fila is said to have a paucal, plural, and greater plural. However, the transition between plural and greater plural occurs around 15 to 20. This puts the Mele-Fila "plural" in range of some larger "paucals" described in other languages. Thus the distinction is muddied between a system of paucal, plural, greater plural, and a system of paucal, greater paucal, plural. and Daatsʼiin is said to mark "three degrees of plurality" (plural, greater plural, and greatest plural) on verbs. In both languages though, the "plural" is often actually a paucal, understood to mean about two to four. However, in neither language is this always the case. The Northern Gumuz paucal/plural may sometimes refer to "much greater than four".
General, singulative, and plurative In some languages, the default form of a noun is not singular, but rather general, which does not specify number and could mean one or more than one. Singular and plural forms are marked from the general form. The general is used when the specific number is deemed irrelevant or unimportant. In this system, the singular is often called the singulative, to distinguish it as derived from a different form. Similarly, the plural derived from the general has been called the plurative. For example, in
Pular: • "dog(s)" (general, any number) • "dog" (singulative) • "dogs" (plurative) However, some languages only have a two-way difference between general and plurative, like in
Japanese: • ()"dog(s)" (general) • ()"dogs" (plurative) Less common is a two-way distinction between general and singulative. No language has this as its default number contrast, although some languages have specific nouns with this distinction. For example, in
Sidama: • "hyena(s)" (general) • "hyena" (singulative) In some languages like
Afar, few nouns have a three-way contrast of general/singulative/plurative, but nouns with two-way contrasts of general/singulative and general/plurative are both common. There are also languages which regularly employ different number systems with a dual, trial, paucal, or greater plural in addition to a general: Additional other systems can be seen in some languages only for specific nouns: • In
Burushaski, for nouns that have the same form in the singular and the plural, the plural marker signifies a greater plural: • "fish" (general) • "a quite large number of fish" (greater plural) • In addition to general, singulative, and paucal, some nouns in Hamer have an additional distinction that has been analyzed either as a greater plural or a collective plural. It seems to unambiguously be a greater plural in specific cases, such as: • "Hamer person/people" (general) • (m) / (f)"Hamer person" (singulative) • "a few Hamer people" (paucal) • "all Hamer people" (greater plural) • Some dialects of Arabic have a few nouns that exhibit a five-way distinction of general, singulative, dual, plurative, and greater plural. In
Damascus Arabic: and
Bininj Kunwok are: "Singular" does not exist for first person inclusive, which is by definition at least two people. In Ilocano, the "dual"
only exists for first person inclusive, and likewise for the "trial" in Bininj Kunwok. Such categorization has been called "inelegant."
Maranao,
Maskelynes, and
Ho-Chunk. The three-way distinction with the addition of unit augmented is mostly found in Australian Aboriginal languages, more specifically non-Pama-Nyungan languages. Among the very few languages outside Australia it applies to is the Austronesian language
Äiwoo and the
Trans–New Guinea language of
Kunimaipa. Minimal and augmented may also combine with paucal to create a three-way pronoun system of minimal, paucal, and augmented/plural. This is reportedly the case with
Kayapo. A four-way system of minimal, unit augmented, paucal, and plural is theoretically possible, but has never been observed in any natural language.
Dual and plural In
Breton: There is at least one attestation in
Ancient Egyptian, from an inscription dating to the reign of
Merneptah, of the exact same grammatical construction with the word "hand" (to mean multiple pairs of hands). A similar category can be found in some nouns of
Classical Arabic, where it has been called the "dual of the plural". However, its meaning is the reverse of the Breton construction. Rather than multiple sets of two each, it indicates two sets of multiple each. Thus there is , spear (singular); , two spears (dual); , spears (plural); and , two groups of spears (dual of the plural). The Arabic dual of the plural more specifically implies a minimum of six items, or two groups of three each. as well as in
Somali and
Maasai, some nouns may compose the plural with itself, to mean multiple different groups. This has been called the "plural of the plural", the plural plural, or the double plural. The Arabic double plural implies a minimum of nine items, or three groups of three each. Some Classical Arabic nouns may even compose the plural with itself yet again, to create the "plural plural plural", or triple plural, such as , sect (singular); , sects (plural); , groups of sects (double plural); and , groups of groups of sects (triple plural). The triple plural implies a minimum of 27 items. According to the 15th century linguist and polymath
Jalal al-Din al-Suyuti, the Arabic word for male camel, , may be cumulatively pluralized up to six times: (plural), (double plural), (triple plural), (quadruple plural), (quintuple plural), and (sextuple plural).
Conflated numbers Some number categories, formed from the combination of other existing categories, have only been attested as occurring secondarily alongside other grammatical number systems within a language. These have been called conflated numbers.
Singular-dual A few languages have specific parts of speech that distinguish between two number categories: one or two, and more than two. The former category can be thought of as a single conflated singular-dual number. • "dog(s)" (one or two) • "dogs" (plural, three or more) The pronouns and verbs of Kalaw Lagaw Ya distinguish singular, dual, and plural, leaving no ambiguity between one and two in full sentences. The singular-dual may also be found in verbs:
Hopi verbs distinguish singular-dual and plural (3+), while Hopi pronouns distinguish singular and plural (2+). The dual can be represented with a plural pronoun combined with a singular-dual verb. This phenomenon has been called a constructed number or a Frankendual. However, Hopi nouns still overtly distinguish singular, dual, and plural.
Idi goes even further by having no specific dual markers of any kind for any part of speech, with the only way to represent dual being combining a singular-dual verb with a plural noun. A more complex example comes from
Koasati, where besides plural, some verbs have singular and dual, some verbs just have singular, and some verbs just have singular-dual:
Singular-dual-trial In the
Tucanoan language of
Tuyuca, inanimate classifiers (which attach to nouns) distinguish one to three versus more than three: • "banana(s)" (one to three) • "bananas" (plural, four or more) The related Tucanoan language of
Wanano also has some nouns that function this way. The same number distinction is also seen in the verb for "climb" in
Miriwoong, an Australian language. • "finger(s)" (one to four) • "fingers" (plural, five or more)
Singular-paucal Zuni, similarly to Hopi, shows a singular-dual versus plural distinction in its verbs, and a plural noun with a nonplural verb indicates dual. However, the opposite combination, a nonplural noun with a plural verb, is also possible, and can be variably interpreted as one, two, or a few. Zuni nouns have thus been described as having a "singular-paucal" versus plural distinction. Some nouns in
Navajo have also been described as working this way, such as: • "fire(s)" (one or several) • "fires" (many) Similarly, although Larike pronouns exhibit singular, dual, trial, and plural, they can only be used for human referents. For nonhuman referents, there are only two possible numbers, which are marked on the verb: a plural, and a "singular" that can be used to mean anywhere from one to a few. • "dog(s)" (nondual, one or three or more than three) • "two dogs" (dual) Wangkumara does not normally mark number directly on nouns. Instead, it distinguishes singular, dual, and plural using adnominal pronouns, plural-indicating adjectives like 'many', or marking on other adjectives. The exception is that nouns take the dual enclitic when referring to two. Thus for nouns alone, the only distinction is dual and nondual. In Jemez, Class III nouns are the opposite: they are inherently nondual, and get marked for dual. The nondual versus dual distinction may also be found in verbs.
Timbisha has verbs with several different possible number distinctions, including nondual ones. A more minor example is
Forest Enets, which has the nondual only in its intransitive third person imperative verbs. The nondual violates a proposed universal of conflated systems, namely that they will always encompass every value except plural. Regardless, the nondual has still been referred to as a conflation of number values.
Numberless languages A small number of languages have no grammatical number at all, even in pronouns. A well known example is
Pirahã.
Acehnese comes close, but appears to have a singular/plural distinction only in the first person pronouns.
Summary of number systems ==Distributives and collectives==