German plural forms vary: -e, -er, -n/-en, -s or no ending. Often with Umlaut (Mann→Männer). The article is always “die”, regardless of gender.
The article used with a noun indicates its gender.
der Teich, der Weg, der Stein → masculinedie Zeit, die Hand → femininedas Holzhaus, das Gesicht → neuter
In the plural, all nouns use the same article:
die Blätter, die Kreise, die Augen → plural
Im Deutschen bilden Nomen die Pluralform auf verschiedene Weise.
Es gibt fünf Endungen: -er, -e, -en, -Ø, -s
Kind → Kinder
Kleid → Kleider
Mann → Männer
Geldschein → Geldscheine
Geldstück → Geldstücke
Gepäckstück → Gepäckstücke
Papier → Papiere
Rock → Röcke
Strumpf → Strümpfe
Schuh → Schuhe
Bluse → Blusen
Farbschattierung → Farbschattierungen
Frau → Frauen
Hose → Hosen
Kreditkarte → Kreditkarten
Tasche → Taschen
Beutel → Beutel
Koffer → Koffer
Schlüssel → Schlüssel
Bonbon → Bonbons
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