grammar.nouns.plural-formation
Making plurals: -s, -es, -ces
Vowel + s (casa → casas); consonant + es (ciudad → ciudades); -z → -ces (luz → luces). Written accents may shift: nación → naciones.
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Explicación
Three rules cover almost all Spanish plurals. A noun ending in an unstressed vowel adds -s: casa → casas, coche → coches. A noun ending in a consonant (or in stressed -í/-ú) adds -es: ciudad → ciudades, papel → papeles, rubí → rubíes.
A final -z changes to -ces: luz → luces, vez → veces, lápiz → lápices. This is a spelling adjustment, not a change in sound.
Adding -es can shift where the written accent falls, so accents appear or disappear to preserve the original stress: examen → exámenes, joven → jóvenes, nación → naciones, inglés → ingleses.
Ejemplos
I bought two watches.
Región: global
There are many nations represented.
Región: global
I bought two pencils and three notebooks.