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A1 Norwegian GrammarPlural Nouns

Learn how to form plural nouns in Norwegian. Most nouns add '-er' or '-r' for indefinite plural, and '-ene' or '-a' for definite plural. Understand the patterns based on gender and syllable structure, and memorize common irregular plurals.

1Masculine and Feminine Plurals

Most masculine and feminine nouns form the plural by adding '-er' (indefinite) and '-ene' (definite). One-syllable nouns often just add '-er'. Two-syllable nouns ending in '-e' drop the '-e' before adding '-er'. The definite plural always ends in '-ene'.

Regular Masculine/Feminine Plurals

SingularPlural Indef.Plural Def.English
en bilbilerbilenecar(s)
en guttguttergutteneboy(s)
ei jentejenterjentenegirl(s)
en timetimertimenehour(s)

Examples

Jeg har to biler.

I have two cars.

bil → biler

Guttene spiller fotball.

The boys play football.

definite plural -ene

Tre jenter sitter der.

Three girls sit there.

jente → jenter

Kurset varer fire timer.

The course lasts four hours.

time → timer

2Neuter Plurals

Neuter nouns follow different patterns. One-syllable neuter nouns often stay the same in indefinite plural (no ending). Multi-syllable neuter nouns add '-er'. The definite plural for neuter nouns ends in '-a' or '-ene'. This is a key difference from masculine/feminine.

Neuter Noun Plurals

SingularPlural Indef.Plural Def.English
et hushushusene/husahouse(s)
et barnbarnbarnachild(ren)
et bordbordbordene/bordatable(s)
et epleeplerepleneapple(s)

Examples

Det er mange hus her.

There are many houses here.

hus stays same in plural

Barna leker ute.

The children play outside.

barn → barna (def)

Vi har fem bord.

We have five tables.

bord stays same

Eplene er røde.

The apples are red.

eple → epler → eplene

3Irregular Plurals

Some common Norwegian nouns have irregular plural forms that must be memorized. These often involve vowel changes (umlaut) or unexpected endings. Many of these are everyday words like 'man', 'foot', 'tooth', 'book', and 'brother'.

Common Irregular Plurals

SingularPluralDefinite Pl.English
en mannmennmenneneman/men
en fotføtterføttenefoot/feet
ei tanntennertennenetooth/teeth
ei bokbøkerbøkenebook(s)

Examples

Tre menn sitter i parken.

Three men sit in the park.

mann → menn (vowel change)

Føttene mine er kalde.

My feet are cold.

fot → føtter (umlaut)

Hun har mange bøker.

She has many books.

bok → bøker

Brødrene mine bor i Oslo.

My brothers live in Oslo.

bror → brødre

4Plural with Numbers and Adjectives

When using numbers with nouns, use the indefinite plural form. Adjectives in the plural always add '-e' regardless of gender. In definite plural with adjectives, use 'de' + adjective with '-e' + noun in definite plural form.

Adjective Agreement in Plural

ConstructionExampleEnglish
number + adj + nounto store bilertwo big cars
de + adj-e + noun-defde store bilenethe big cars
mange + adj + nounmange fine husmany nice houses
alle + adj + noun-defalle små barnaall the small children

Examples

Vi har fire nye stoler.

We have four new chairs.

nye (plural adj form)

De gamle husene står der.

The old houses stand there.

de + gamle + husene

Mange unge mennesker bor her.

Many young people live here.

unge (plural -e ending)

Alle barna er glade.

All the children are happy.

glade (plural predicate)