100 Singular and Plural Nouns for Kids

100 Singular and Plural Nouns for Kids

Nouns are the names of people, places, animals, or things. In English, a noun can be singular (one) or plural (more than one). Learning singular and plural nouns is important for using correct grammar in speaking and writing. In this blog post, kids will learn 100 common singular and plural nouns with easy examples to improve their English skills.

Read More about: 200 Irregular Plurals in English

What Are Singular and Plural Nouns?

Singular Noun:

It means one person, place, animal, or thing.

Examples: cat, book, boy

Plural Noun:

It means more than one person, place, animal, or thing.

Examples: cats, books, boys

How to Make Plural Nouns?

Here are some easy rules:

Rule Example (Singular → Plural)
Add -s dog → dogs, pen → pens
Add -es to words ending in s, x, ch, sh, o box → boxes, mango → mangoes
Change -y to -ies if before y is a consonant baby → babies, city → cities
Some words change completely man → men, child → children
Some words stay the same sheep → sheep, deer → deer

100 Singular and Plural Nouns List

Below is a table of 100 common nouns for kids to learn:

Singular Plural
bird birds
car cars
dog dogs
pen pens
table tables
girl girls
fan fans
school schools
flower flowers
spoon spoons
hat hats
lamp lamps
sock socks
duck ducks
knife knives
bus buses
dish dishes
fox foxes
lady ladies
story stories
woman women
foot feet
mouse mice
deer deer
100 Singular and Plural Nouns for Kids
Singular and Plural Words Examples
Singular Plural
apple apples
ball balls
cat cats
book books
chair chairs
boy boys
bag bags
house houses
tree trees
cup cups
toy toys
bottle bottles
shoe shoes
frog frogs
leaf leaves
box boxes
glass glasses
watch watches
baby babies
city cities
man men
child children
tooth teeth
sheep sheep
100 Singular and Plural Nouns for Kids
Singular and Plural Words for Kids

Practice Sentences

Let’s learn with some easy sentences:

  • I see one cat. / I see many cats.
  • She has a book. / They have books.
  • The baby is sleeping. / The babies are playing.
  • A man is walking. / Two men are running.
  • One child is singing. / The children are dancing.

Tips to Remember

  • Most nouns just need -s to become plural.
  • If a word ends with s, x, ch, sh, add -es.
  • If a word ends in y and has a consonant before it, change y to -ies.
  • Some words are irregular — they change form or stay the same.

Learning singular and plural nouns is fun and easy with regular practice. Use this list daily, read aloud, and try to make your own sentences.

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About Matloob

Matloob is a Mentor at vocabzoo.com, where learning English becomes fun and easy. With over 7 years of experience in research, English lessons, and content writing, Matloob is dedicated to helping English learners build their skills with confidence.

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