Weird Plurals: Latin and Greek Origins, Irregular Plural Noun Forms #infographic Published by Web Desk Tuesday, April 14, 2015 Mouse to mice, goose to geese and child to children: an explanation and infographic will help to weed through English’s irregular plurals. Infographic by: grammar Share This Infographic On Your Site <p> <a href='http://www.visualistan.com/2015/04/weird-plurals-latin-and-greek-origins-irregular-plural-noun-forms-infographic.html'><img src='https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/originals/b9/f9/47/b9f9475d9cdfe9bfe66f159be58af76c.jpg' alt='Weird plurals: Latin and Greek origins, irregular plural noun forms #infographic' width='640px' border='0' /></a>You can also find more infographics at <a href="http://www.visualistan.com">Visualistan</a></p> Next How Startups Can Leverage Big Data For Success #infographic Previous Cinema's Biggest Movie Sets #infographic Related Post Related Posts A Timeline of New Words Based on Business Names #InfographicPinterest Introduces New Languages in the App to Broaden Global Accessibility YouTube is Rolling Out ‘Comment Translation’ and ‘Smart Replies’ to More Users Disqus Comments Disqus Code Load comments