1,244 nouns
The largest plural family in the corpus, common with many feminine nouns and borrowed endings.
Checkpoint
Recognize when a noun adds -en, often with no stem surprise.
Examples
Noun Plural Lab
The noun data now turns plural memorization into pattern work: see the biggest endings, inspect real examples, and drill the exact plural forms.
2,793
plural-ready nouns
8
plural pattern groups
-en plurals
largest visible pattern
3,189
total noun entries
Corpus signal
2,793 nouns can generate direct plural questions, and 87 also include nominative plural declension data.
The largest plural family in the corpus, common with many feminine nouns and borrowed endings.
Checkpoint
Recognize when a noun adds -en, often with no stem surprise.
Examples
A high-frequency pattern for many short masculine and neuter nouns, sometimes with umlaut.
Checkpoint
Choose the plural ending while watching for vowel changes.
Examples
Some nouns keep the visible singular form in plural, especially several -er and -en nouns.
Checkpoint
Notice when the plural is stable instead of adding a new ending.
Examples
Useful for many international words, abbreviations, and borrowed nouns.
Checkpoint
Spot the modern loanword pattern quickly.
Examples
Each group is created from real noun entries with usable plural forms, then linked directly into focused practice.
The largest plural family in the corpus, common with many feminine nouns and borrowed endings.
Checkpoint
Recognize when a noun adds -en, often with no stem surprise.
Examples
A high-frequency pattern for many short masculine and neuter nouns, sometimes with umlaut.
Checkpoint
Choose the plural ending while watching for vowel changes.
Examples
Some nouns keep the visible singular form in plural, especially several -er and -en nouns.
Checkpoint
Notice when the plural is stable instead of adding a new ending.
Examples
Useful for many international words, abbreviations, and borrowed nouns.
Checkpoint
Spot the modern loanword pattern quickly.
Examples
A smaller but important pattern, often paired with umlaut in common nouns.
Checkpoint
Practice forms like Kinder, Länder, and Häuser as a group.
Examples
A compact pattern for nouns that only need a final -n.
Checkpoint
Separate simple -n additions from the larger -en family.
Examples
Feminine person nouns often move from -in to -innen.
Checkpoint
Turn role nouns like Lehrerin into their plural forms.
Examples
Irregular, alternative, or less common forms that are best learned directly.
Checkpoint
Treat these nouns as direct recall targets.
Examples
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