-ers
English
Etymology
Etymology tree
English -er
English -ers
From -er.
Suffix
-ers
- (informal, originally school slang) Used to form slang or colloquial equivalents of words.
- (informal, originally school slang) Used to form mostly adjectives used informally.
Derived terms
Anagrams
Afrikaans
Etymology
From Dutch -ers, a chiefly dialectal plural morpheme equivalent to standard Dutch -eren (whence Afrikaans -ere).
Pronunciation
Audio: (file)
Suffix
-ers
- forms the plural of three nouns, all of which denote young creatures
Usage notes
- The colloquial plurale tantum goeters (“things, stuff”) is only etymologically an inflection of goed (“a good”), whose true plural is goedere.
- Two other Afrikaans nouns are backformations from plurals originally using the suffix -ers: eier (“egg”, from Dutch ei) and hoender (“chicken”, from Dutch hoen).
Catalan
Pronunciation
Suffix
-érs
- plural of -ér
French
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ɛʁ/
- Hyphenation: -ère
Suffix
-ers
- plural of -er