A1

Plural Formation in Danish

Flertalsformer

Overview

Plural formation (flertalsformer) in Danish follows several patterns that you need to learn at the A1 level. The most common plural endings are -er, -e, and zero ending (no change). Knowing which ending to use depends partly on the noun's gender and structure, but many plurals must simply be memorized.

Plural endings: -er (en bog→bøger), -e (en time→timer), zero (et barn→børn). Irregular plurals exist. Some nouns also undergo vowel changes in the plural, similar to English "man/men" or "foot/feet." Danish examples include mand/maend (man/men) and bog/boger (book/books, with the vowel change o to o-with-slash).

While the variety of plural patterns may seem daunting, the good news is that the most common everyday nouns are the ones you will learn first, and their plurals will become second nature through regular use.

Formation

Main plural patterns

Pattern Singular Plural Example
Add -er en bog boger book → books
Add -er (no vowel change) en pige piger girl → girls
Add -e et hus huse house → houses
Zero (no change) et barn born (irregular) child → children
Add -er with vowel change en mand maend man → men

Guidelines for plural endings

Noun type Typical plural Examples
Most common gender (en) nouns -er en kat → katte, en stol → stole
One-syllable neuter (et) nouns -e or zero et bord → borde, et ar → ar
Multi-syllable en-nouns ending in -e -r en time → timer
Borrowed words -er en computer → computere
Some with vowel change varies en bog → boger, en mand → maend

Irregular plurals to memorize

Singular Plural Translation
et barn born child / children
en mand maend man / men
en mus mus mouse / mice
et oje ojne eye / eyes
en fod fodder foot / feet

Examples in Context

Danish English Note
bog → bøger book → books Vowel change + -er
pige → piger girl → girls Regular -er
hus → huse house → houses Add -e
barn → børn child → children Irregular
stol → stole chair → chairs Add -e
bil → biler car → cars Regular -er
mand → mænd man → men Vowel change
kvinde → kvinder woman → women Regular -er
sko → sko shoe → shoes Zero plural
træ → træer tree → trees Add -er

Common Mistakes

Using English plural rules

  • Wrong: hus → huser
  • Right: hus → huse
  • Why: Danish plural endings follow their own patterns. The ending depends on the noun class, not English conventions.

Forgetting vowel changes

  • Wrong: bog → boger
  • Right: bog → bøger
  • Why: Some nouns change their vowel in the plural. These must be memorized.

Adding -s for plural

  • Wrong: bil → bils
  • Right: bil → biler
  • Why: Danish does not use -s for plurals (unlike English). Use the correct Danish plural ending.

Usage Notes

Danish plural formation has several patterns, and while there are tendencies, irregularities are common. Many everyday nouns have irregular plurals that must simply be memorized. Danish dictionaries always list the plural form, so make a habit of checking. In casual speech, Danes sometimes simplify or regularize forms, but in writing, the standard plurals are expected.

Practice Tips

  • Practice with flashcards. Create cards with examples of plural formation on one side and their English translations on the other. Review daily until the patterns feel automatic.
  • Use plural formation in daily sentences. Try to create three new sentences each day using this grammar point. Write them in a notebook and review them weekly.
  • Listen for plural formation in Danish media. Even at the beginner level, try listening to simple Danish podcasts or children's shows and notice how native speakers use this pattern.

Related Concepts

Prerequisite

Noun Gender (Common/Neuter) in DanishA1

More A1 concepts

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