Plural rules in French can feel like a trap. You add an -s, and then half the time the word sounds exactly the same. It’s enough to make you second-guess every sentence. But here’s the good news: most French plurals follow a handful of predictable patterns, and once you spot them, you can stop guessing and start typing – or speaking – with real confidence.
This reference gathers around 35 key rules and patterns you’ll actually use, from the straightforward add-an-s cases to the trickier -al, -eu, and -ou endings that love to break their own rules. Every entry gives you a plain-English meaning and a practical example sentence, so you see the plural in its natural habitat – no dusty grammar jargon.
It’s built for general French learners who want a clean, no-fluff list they can scroll, study, and return to whenever a plural throws them off. When you’re ready to take your study offline, just grab the free PDF using the download button that sits below the table.
Use this list as a starting point, then keep going in the Yak Yacker French section for more words, phrases, and study-friendly reference pages.
Quick Quiz
Think you’ve memorised the tricky -al to -aux switch? The quick quiz below will give you a friendly reality check – no grades, just a nudge toward the patterns that need a second look.
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Browse the Full List
| Word |
|---|
| religieuse |
| sapin |
| scie |
| sécher |
| semer |
| solde |
| supplier |
| tanner |
| toubib |
| waouh |



