What is the correct plural of octopus?
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I would go with Octopuses. That is part of the Wikipedia "Plural form of words ending in -us" article:
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Plural forms of Octopus is: octopuses /ˈɒktəpʊsɪz/, octopi /ˈɒktəpaɪ/, or octopodes /ɒkˈtɒpədiːz/ . See Terminology of Octopus from Wikipedia. |
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The NOAD has the following note about the plural of octopus:
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Octopi is based on an incorrect assumption, that octopus is of Latin derivation, so we shouldn't use it. Octopuses sounds funny, so I wouldn't use it. Octopodes may be rare, but it's right, so perhaps it's up to us to get people used to it. |
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Let's find out from the Merriam-Webster's editor: |
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Octopuses and octopodes are both correct; the former is appropriate modern English, the latter is most appropriate if you're intentionally trying to come off as a pedantic classicist. (I use it regularly.) Octopoids is the plural of octopoid, not octopus. Octopi is a mistaken formation based on interpreting octopus as being constructed using a Latin -us suffix when it is in fact constructed using a Greek -pus suffix. (I guarantee you that somebody will write an answer that asserts that it has attained correctness through usage. I contrariwise assert that if ten billion people all jump off a cliff, they're still all stupid.) (Note: this answer was written for a slightly different question that was merged with the current question, which is why it may seem I was answering oddly.) |
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