inflect.py - Accurately generate plurals, singular nouns, ordinals, indefinite articles, and word-based representations of numbers. This functionality is limited to English.
>>> import inflect
>>> p = inflect.engine()
Simple example with pluralization and word-representation of numbers:
>>> count=1
>>> print('There', p.plural_verb('was', count), p.number_to_words(count), p.plural_noun('person', count), 'by the door.')
There was one person by the door.
When count=243
, the same code will generate:
There were two hundred and forty-three people by the door.
plural
,plural_noun
,plural_verb
,plural_adj
,singular_noun
,no
,num
compare
,compare_nouns
,compare_nouns
,compare_adjs
a
,an
present_participle
ordinal
,number_to_words
join
inflect
,classical
,gender
defnoun
,defverb
,defadj
,defa
,defan
>>> "the plural of person is " + p.plural("person")
'the plural of person is people'
>>> "the plural of 1 person is " + p.plural("person", 1)
'the plural of 1 person is person'
>>> p.plural_noun("I", 2)
'we'
>>> p.plural_verb("saw", 1)
'saw'
>>> p.plural_adj("my", 2)
'our'
>>> p.plural_noun("saw", 2)
'saws'
>>> "The singular of people is " + p.singular_noun("people")
'The singular of people is person'
>>> p.singular_noun("they")
'it'
>>> p.gender("feminine")
>>> p.singular_noun("they")
'she'
>>> errors = 1
>>> "There ", p.plural_verb("was", errors), p.no(" error", errors)
('There ', 'was', ' 1 error')
>>> errors = 2
>>> "There ", p.plural_verb("was", errors), p.no(" error", errors)
('There ', 'were', ' 2 errors')
>>> p.num(1, "")
''
>>> p.plural("I")
'I'
>>> p.plural_verb(" saw")
' saw'
>>> p.num(2)
'2'
>>> p.plural_noun(" saw")
' saws'
>>> "There ", p.num(errors, ""), p.plural_verb("was"), p.no(" error")
('There ', '', 'were', ' 2 errors')
>>> p.compare('person', 'person')
'eq'
>>> p.compare('person', 'people')
's:p'
>>> p.compare_nouns('person', 'people')
's:p'
>>> p.compare_verbs('run', 'ran')
False
>>> p.compare_verbs('run', 'running')
False
>>> p.compare_verbs('run', 'run')
'eq'
>>> p.compare_adjs('my', 'mine')
False
>>> p.compare_adjs('my', 'our')
's:p'
>>> "Did you want ", p.a('thing'), " or ", p.a('idea')
('Did you want ', 'a thing', ' or ', 'an idea')
>>> "It was", p.ordinal(1), " from the left"
('It was', '1st', ' from the left')
>>> "It was", p.ordinal(2), " from the left"
('It was', '2nd', ' from the left')
>>> "It was", p.ordinal(3), " from the left"
('It was', '3rd', ' from the left')
>>> "It was", p.ordinal(347), " from the left"
('It was', '347th', ' from the left')
Note: This returns a single string.
>>> p.number_to_words(1)
'one'
>>> p.number_to_words(38)
'thirty-eight'
>>> p.number_to_words(1234)
'one thousand, two hundred and thirty-four'
>>> p.number_to_words(p.ordinal(1234))
'one thousand, two hundred and thirty-fourth'
>>> p.number_to_words(1234, wantlist=True)
['one thousand', 'two hundred and thirty-four']
>>> p.number_to_words(12345, group=1)
'one, two, three, four, five'
>>> p.number_to_words(12345, group=2)
'twelve, thirty-four, five'
>>> p.number_to_words(12345, group=3)
'one twenty-three, forty-five'
>>> p.number_to_words(1234, andword="")
'one thousand, two hundred thirty-four'
>>> p.number_to_words(1234, andword=", plus")
'one thousand, two hundred, plus thirty-four'
>>> p.number_to_words(555_1202, group=1, zero="oh")
'five, five, five, one, two, oh, two'
>>> p.number_to_words(555_1202, group=1, one="unity")
'five, five, five, unity, two, zero, two'
>>> p.number_to_words(123.456, group=1, decimal="mark")
'one, two, three, mark, four, five, six'
Above provided threshold, numberals will remain numerals
>>> p.number_to_words(9, threshold=10)
'nine'
>>> p.number_to_words(10, threshold=10)
'ten'
>>> p.number_to_words(11, threshold=10)
'11'
>>> p.number_to_words(1000, threshold=10)
'1,000'
>>> p.join(("apple", "banana", "carrot"))
'apple, banana, and carrot'
>>> p.join(("apple", "banana"))
'apple and banana'
>>> p.join(("apple", "banana", "carrot"), final_sep="")
'apple, banana and carrot'
>>> p.join(('apples', 'bananas', 'carrots'), conj='and even')
'apples, bananas, and even carrots'
>>> p.join(('apple', 'banana', 'carrot'), sep='/', sep_spaced=False, conj='', conj_spaced=False)
'apple/banana/carrot'
Adhere to conventions from Classical Latin and Classical Greek
>>> p.classical()
>>> p.plural_noun("focus", 2)
'foci'
>>> p.plural_noun("cherubim", 2)
'cherubims'
>>> p.plural_noun("cherub", 2)
'cherubim'
Other options for classical plurals:
p.classical(all=True) # USE ALL CLASSICAL PLURALS
p.classical(all=False) # SWITCH OFF CLASSICAL MODE
p.classical(zero=True) # "no error" INSTEAD OF "no errors"
p.classical(zero=False) # "no errors" INSTEAD OF "no error"
p.classical(herd=True) # "2 buffalo" INSTEAD OF "2 buffalos"
p.classical(herd=False) # "2 buffalos" INSTEAD OF "2 buffalo"
p.classical(persons=True) # "2 chairpersons" INSTEAD OF "2 chairpeople"
p.classical(persons=False) # "2 chairpeople" INSTEAD OF "2 chairpersons"
p.classical(ancient=True) # "2 formulae" INSTEAD OF "2 formulas"
p.classical(ancient=False) # "2 formulas" INSTEAD OF "2 formulae"
Supports string interpolation with the following functions: plural()
, plural_noun()
, plural_verb()
, plural_adj()
, singular_noun()
, a()
, an()
, num()
and ordinal()
.
>>> p.inflect("The plural of {0} is plural('{0}')".format('car'))
'The plural of car is cars'
>>> p.inflect("The singular of {0} is singular_noun('{0}')".format('car'))
'The singular of car is car'
>>> p.inflect("I saw {0} plural('cat',{0})".format(3))
'I saw 3 cats'
>>> p.inflect(
... "plural('I',{0}) "
... "plural_verb('saw',{0}) "
... "plural('a',{1}) "
... "plural_noun('saw',{1})".format(1, 2)
... )
'I saw some saws'
>>> p.inflect(
... "num({0}, False)plural('I') "
... "plural_verb('saw') "
... "num({1}, False)plural('a') "
... "plural_noun('saw')".format(N1, 1)
... )
'I saw a saw'
>>> p.inflect(
... "num({0}, False)plural('I') "
... "plural_verb('saw') "
... "num({1}, False)plural('a') "
... "plural_noun('saw')".format(2, 2)
... )
'we saw some saws'
>>> p.inflect("I saw num({0}) plural('cat')\nnum()".format(cat_count))
'I saw 3 cats\n'
>>> p.inflect("There plural_verb('was',{0}) no('error',{0})".format(errors))
'There were 2 errors'
>>> p.inflect("There num({0}, False)plural_verb('was') no('error')".format(errors))
'There were 2 errors'
>>> p.inflect("Did you want a('{0}') or an('{1}')".format(thing, idea))
'Did you want a thing or an idea'
>>> p.inflect("It was ordinal('{0}') from the left".format(2))
'It was 2nd from the left'
Allows for overriding default rules.
Override noun defaults:
p.defnoun("VAX", "VAXen") # SINGULAR => PLURAL
Override Verb defaults:
p.defverb(
"will", # 1ST PERSON SINGULAR
"shall", # 1ST PERSON PLURAL
"will", # 2ND PERSON SINGULAR
"will", # 2ND PERSON PLURAL
"will", # 3RD PERSON SINGULAR
"will", # 3RD PERSON PLURAL
)
Override adjective defaults:
>>> p.defadj('hir', 'their')
1
>>> p.plural_adj('hir', 2)
'their'
Override the words that use the indefinite articles "a" or "an":
>>> p.a('ape', 1)
'an ape'
>>> p.defa('a')
1
>>> p.a('ape', 1)
'an ape'
>>> p.defa('ape')
1
>>> p.a('ape', 1)
'a ape'
>>> p.defan('horrendous.*')
1
>>> p.a('horrendous affectation', 1)
'an horrendous affectation'
>>>
The methods of the class engine
in module inflect.py
provide plural
inflections, singular noun inflections, "a"/"an" selection for English words,
and manipulation of numbers as words.
Plural forms of all nouns, most verbs, and some adjectives are provided. Where appropriate, "classical" variants (for example: "brother" -> "brethren", "dogma" -> "dogmata", etc.) are also provided.
Single forms of nouns are also provided. The gender of singular pronouns can be chosen (for example "they" -> "it" or "she" or "he" or "they").
Pronunciation-based "a"/"an" selection is provided for all English words, and most initialisms.
It is also possible to inflect numerals (1,2,3) to ordinals (1st, 2nd, 3rd) or to English words ("one", "two", "three").
In generating these inflections, inflect.py
follows the Oxford
English Dictionary and the guidelines in Fowler's Modern English
Usage, preferring the former where the two disagree.
The module is built around standard British spelling, but is designed to cope with common American variants as well. Slang, jargon, and other English dialects are not explicitly catered for.
Where two or more inflected forms exist for a single word (typically a
"classical" form and a "modern" form), inflect.py
prefers the
more common form (typically the "modern" one), unless "classical"
processing has been specified
(see MODERN VS CLASSICAL INFLECTIONS).
All of the plural...
plural inflection methods take the word to be
inflected as their first argument and return the corresponding inflection.
Note that all such methods expect the singular form of the word. The
results of passing a plural form are undefined (and unlikely to be correct).
Similarly, the si...
singular inflection method expects the plural
form of the word.
The plural...
methods also take an optional second argument,
which indicates the grammatical "number" of the word (or of another word
with which the word being inflected must agree). If the "number" argument is
supplied and is not 1
(or "one"
or "a"
, or some other adjective that
implies the singular), the plural form of the word is returned. If the
"number" argument does indicate singularity, the (uninflected) word
itself is returned. If the number argument is omitted, the plural form
is returned unconditionally.
The si...
method takes a second argument in a similar fashion. If it is
some form of the number 1
, or is omitted, the singular form is returned.
Otherwise the plural is returned unaltered.
The various methods of inflect.engine
are:
plural_noun(word, count=None)
The method plural_noun()
takes a singular English noun or
pronoun and returns its plural. Pronouns in the nominative ("I" ->
"we") and accusative ("me" -> "us") cases are handled, as are
possessive pronouns ("mine" -> "ours").
plural_verb(word, count=None)
The method plural_verb()
takes the singular form of a
conjugated verb (that is, one which is already in the correct "person"
and "mood") and returns the corresponding plural conjugation.
plural_adj(word, count=None)
The method plural_adj()
takes the singular form of
certain types of adjectives and returns the corresponding plural form.
Adjectives that are correctly handled include: "numerical" adjectives
("a" -> "some"), demonstrative adjectives ("this" -> "these", "that" ->
"those"), and possessives ("my" -> "our", "cat's" -> "cats'", "child's"
-> "childrens'", etc.)
plural(word, count=None)
The method
plural()
takes a singular English noun, pronoun, verb, or adjective and returns its plural form. Where a word has more than one inflection depending on its part of speech (for example, the noun "thought" inflects to "thoughts", the verb "thought" to "thought"), the (singular) noun sense is preferred to the (singular) verb sense.Hence
plural("knife")
will return "knives" ("knife" having been treated as a singular noun), whereasplural("knifes")
will return "knife" ("knifes" having been treated as a 3rd person singular verb).The inherent ambiguity of such cases suggests that, where the part of speech is known,
plural_noun
,plural_verb
, andplural_adj
should be used in preference toplural
.
singular_noun(word, count=None)
The methodsingular_noun()
takes a plural English noun or pronoun and returns its singular. Pronouns in the nominative ("we" -> "I") and accusative ("us" -> "me") cases are handled, as are possessive pronouns ("ours" -> "mine"). When third person singular pronouns are returned they take the neuter gender by default ("they" -> "it"), not ("they"-> "she") nor ("they" -> "he"). This can be changed withgender()
.
Note that all these methods ignore any whitespace surrounding the
word being inflected, but preserve that whitespace when the result is
returned. For example, plural(" cat ")
returns " cats ".
gender(genderletter)
The third person plural pronoun takes the same form for the female, male and neuter (e.g. "they"). The singular however, depends upon gender (e.g. "she", "he", "it" and "they" -- "they" being the gender neutral form.) By defaultsingular_noun
returns the neuter form, however, the gender can be selected with thegender
method. Pass the first letter of the gender togender
to return the f(eminine), m(asculine), n(euter) or t(hey) form of the singular. e.g. gender('f') followed by singular_noun('themselves') returns 'herself'.
The plural...
methods return only the inflected word, not the count that
was used to inflect it. Thus, in order to produce "I saw 3 ducks", it
is necessary to use:
print("I saw", N, p.plural_noun(animal, N))
Since the usual purpose of producing a plural is to make it agree with
a preceding count, inflect.py provides a method
(no(word, count)
) which, given a word and a(n optional) count, returns the
count followed by the correctly inflected word. Hence the previous
example can be rewritten:
print("I saw ", p.no(animal, N))
In addition, if the count is zero (or some other term which implies
zero, such as "zero"
, "nil"
, etc.) the count is replaced by the
word "no". Hence, if N
had the value zero, the previous example
would print (the somewhat more elegant):
I saw no animals
rather than:
I saw 0 animals
Note that the name of the method is a pun: the method
returns either a number (a No.) or a "no"
, in front of the
inflected word.
In some contexts, the need to supply an explicit count to the various
plural...
methods makes for tiresome repetition. For example:
print(
plural_adj("This", errors),
plural_noun(" error", errors),
plural_verb(" was", errors),
" fatal.",
)
inflect.py therefore provides a method
(num(count=None, show=None)
) which may be used to set a persistent "default number"
value. If such a value is set, it is subsequently used whenever an
optional second "number" argument is omitted. The default value thus set
can subsequently be removed by calling num()
with no arguments.
Hence we could rewrite the previous example:
p.num(errors)
print(p.plural_adj("This"), p.plural_noun(" error"), p.plural_verb(" was"), "fatal.")
p.num()
Normally, num()
returns its first argument, so that it may also
be "inlined" in contexts like:
print(p.num(errors), p.plural_noun(" error"), p.plural_verb(" was"), " detected.")
if severity > 1:
print(
p.plural_adj("This"), p.plural_noun(" error"), p.plural_verb(" was"), "fatal."
)
However, in certain contexts (see INTERPOLATING INFLECTIONS IN STRINGS)
it is preferable that num()
return an empty string. Hence num()
provides an optional second argument. If that argument is supplied (that is, if
it is defined) and evaluates to false, num
returns an empty string
instead of its first argument. For example:
print(p.num(errors, 0), p.no("error"), p.plural_verb(" was"), " detected.")
if severity > 1:
print(
p.plural_adj("This"), p.plural_noun(" error"), p.plural_verb(" was"), "fatal."
)
inflect.py also provides a solution to the problem
of comparing words of differing plurality through the methods
compare(word1, word2)
, compare_nouns(word1, word2)
,
compare_verbs(word1, word2)
, and compare_adjs(word1, word2)
.
Each of these methods takes two strings, and compares them
using the corresponding plural-inflection method (plural()
, plural_noun()
,
plural_verb()
, and plural_adj()
respectively).
The comparison returns true if:
- the strings are equal, or
- one string is equal to a plural form of the other, or
- the strings are two different plural forms of the one word.
Hence all of the following return true:
p.compare("index", "index") # RETURNS "eq"
p.compare("index", "indexes") # RETURNS "s:p"
p.compare("index", "indices") # RETURNS "s:p"
p.compare("indexes", "index") # RETURNS "p:s"
p.compare("indices", "index") # RETURNS "p:s"
p.compare("indices", "indexes") # RETURNS "p:p"
p.compare("indexes", "indices") # RETURNS "p:p"
p.compare("indices", "indices") # RETURNS "eq"
As indicated by the comments in the previous example, the actual value
returned by the various compare
methods encodes which of the
three equality rules succeeded: "eq" is returned if the strings were
identical, "s:p" if the strings were singular and plural respectively,
"p:s" for plural and singular, and "p:p" for two distinct plurals.
Inequality is indicated by returning an empty string.
It should be noted that two distinct singular words which happen to take the same plural form are not considered equal, nor are cases where one (singular) word's plural is the other (plural) word's singular. Hence all of the following return false:
p.compare("base", "basis") # ALTHOUGH BOTH -> "bases"
p.compare("syrinx", "syringe") # ALTHOUGH BOTH -> "syringes"
p.compare("she", "he") # ALTHOUGH BOTH -> "they"
p.compare("opus", "operas") # ALTHOUGH "opus" -> "opera" -> "operas"
p.compare("taxi", "taxes") # ALTHOUGH "taxi" -> "taxis" -> "taxes"
Note too that, although the comparison is "number-insensitive" it is not
case-insensitive (that is, plural("time","Times")
returns false. To obtain
both number and case insensitivity, use the lower()
method on both strings
(that is, plural("time".lower(), "Times".lower())
returns true).
Shout out to these libraries that provide related functionality:
- WordSet parses identifiers like variable names into sets of words suitable for re-assembling in another form.
- word2number converts words to a number.
Available as part of the Tidelift Subscription.
This project and the maintainers of thousands of other packages are working with Tidelift to deliver one enterprise subscription that covers all of the open source you use.