Is the plural form of mongoose, mongooses or mongeese?

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Mongooses According to the American Heritage Dictionary. This is because its root (mangus) is from a large family of languages (Dravidian) spoken in India where the mongoose is indigenous. The word goose comes from old English and thus forms its plural as geese.

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Mongooses The words "mongoose" and "goose" are not etymologically related. "Goose" is an Anglo-Saxon word, and the Anglo-saxons form plurals with vowel shifts (e.g. Foot->feet, man->men). "Mongoose" comes from a Hindi word, roughly transliterated as "maangus".

The rules of English let us make plurals either by importing the original language plural (e.g. "cherubim", "octopodes") or by the regular plural rule of adding "s" ("cherubs", "octopuses"). Often we settle on one or the other; "octopodes" sounds wrong and so "octopuses" is preferred. The decision is made by popular acclaim, rather than by any particular rule, and it's a matter of time as to which one wins out.

I have no idea what the Hindi plural of "mongoose" is, but it's certainly not "mongeese". So we settle for the regular rule: mongooses. Incidentally, that makes "octopi" just plain wrong.

"Octopus" is a word with a Greek root, not a Latin one.

Mongoose According to the Oxford American Dictionary is it "mongooses". Sources: Oxford American Dictionary .

Technically, it's mongooses. The most accepted plural of mongoose is mongooses. It's very likely this is the one a spell-checker program will accept.

A quick google search tells me that "mongooses" is at least 4 times more common than "mongeese. " That said, I use mongeese exclusively. Why?

It sounds better, it makes more sense*, and this is a living language. If enough of us start using mongeese, it'll eventually BECOME the right plural form. *Okay, it actually makes less sense, but it makes more sense as long as the plural of "goose" is "geese.

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