Proto-Germanic -> Old English -> Modern English *mūs -> mūs -> mouse *mūsiz -> mȳs -> mice (louse follows the same pattern), however: *hūsą -> hūs -> house *hūsō -> hūs -> houses They come from different word classes going all the way back to PGmc, so the plurals were formed differently. Answer from evan0735 on reddit.com
louse
/lous/
noun
  1. Any of numerous small, flat-bodied, wingless biting or sucking insects of the order Phthiraptera, which live as external parasites on birds and mammals, including humans. The lice are sometimes classified together with the psocids in the order Psocodea.
  2. (Slang) A mean or despicable person.
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition. More at Wordnik
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Vocabulary.com
vocabulary.com › dictionary › louse
Louse - Definition, Meaning & Synonyms | Vocabulary.com
If you find a louse in your hair, you'll have to treat your scalp to get rid of any of its friends that might still be lurking there. Since they tend to travel in groups, the plural form of louse, lice, is much more common ...
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Plural of louse
Hi all! Please advice:) Do you know a plural of louse? Thanks! More on preply.com
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July 17, 2016
Why is it louse and lice & mouse and mice. But not house and hice yet houses?
Proto-Germanic -> Old English -> Modern English *mūs -> mūs -> mouse *mūsiz -> mȳs -> mice (louse follows the same pattern), however: *hūsą -> hūs -> house *hūsō -> hūs -> houses They come from different word classes going all the way back to PGmc, so the plurals were formed differently. More on reddit.com
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August 3, 2022
etymology - Why is the plural form of "house" not "hice"? - English Language & Usage Stack Exchange
The plural of mouse is mice, and the plural of louse is lice. Why is the plural form of house not hice? According to Merriam-Webster, the word house is already longer in the language, just as mou... More on english.stackexchange.com
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July 22, 2016
The singular of ‘lice’ is ‘louse’.A) YesB) No
The singular of lice is louse ... ... Hint: This question is from the topic of singular and plural nouns. The singular and plural forms of a noun indicate whether the noun is single or multiple in number. It is a very useful tool in English grammar. Plural words can be formed by adding ‘s’ ... More on vedantu.com
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January 17, 2025
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Merriam-Webster
merriam-webster.com › dictionary › louse
Definition of LOUSE
1 week ago - Synonyms of louse · 1 · plural lice ˈlīs · a · : any of various small wingless usually flattened insects (orders Anoplura and Mallophaga) parasitic on warm-blooded animals · b · : a small usually sluggish arthropod (such as a head louse) that lives on other animals or on plants and sucks their blood or juices ·
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Preply
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Plural of louse | Learn English
July 17, 2016 - The common plural of louse is lice The plural form louses is believed to be slang used to mean unpleasant or mean persons
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Encyclopedia Britannica
britannica.com › dictionary › louse
Louse Definition & Meaning | Britannica Dictionary
[+] more examples [-] hide examples [+] Example sentences [-] Hide examples · 2 louse /ˈlaʊs/ verb · louses; loused; lousing · 2 louse · /ˈlaʊs/ verb · louses; loused; lousing · Britannica Dictionary definition of LOUSE ·
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Quora
quora.com › What-is-the-plural-form-of-lice
What is the plural form of 'lice'? - Quora
Answer (1 of 11): Lice itself is a Plural form and the the Singular of it is Louse. Louse ( Insect ) Louse is the common name for members of the order Phthiraptera, which contains nearly 5,000 species of wingless insect. : Wikipedia
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Quora
quora.com › Why-is-lice-the-plural-of-louse
Why is lice the plural of louse? - Quora
Answer (1 of 2): Original Question: Why is lice the plural of louse? Original Response: Why is mice the plural of mouse? Maybe: Why is nice the plural of nous? OK, original but not helpful. The real answer, I would suggest is that both pairs of words come from Germanic roots. The changing of...
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Quora
quora.com › What-is-the-plural-form-of-the-word-louse
What is the plural form of the word 'louse'? - Quora
Answer (1 of 5): Plural of ‘ louse ( a parasite ) is : Lice. Louse like mouse is an irregular noun and these nouns donot follow regular rules of becoming plural by adding ‘ s ‘ or ,’ es ‘ at their end..
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Canadian War Museum
warmuseum.ca › overthetop › glossary › lice
Lice - Lice | Over The Top
plural form of “louse”; a small, flat, wingless insect that lives off the blood of its host.
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Pinterest
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What is the Plural of Louse? | Louse vs. Lice
📌 Explanation: Some English words change their plural form due to vowel shifts. ✔️ Singular: "This is a louse." ✔️ Plural: "These are lice." Enhance your English vocabulary and grammar with fun quizzes!
Published   March 20, 2025
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Leverage Edu
leverageedu.com › questions-answers › the-singular-of-lice-is-louse-class-8-english-cbse
The singular of Lice is Louse
June 16, 2025 - The singular of lice is louse. This might sound unusual because louse does not follow the regular pluralisation pattern in English, where most nouns simply take an -s or -es ending, like pen becomes pens or brush becomes brushes.
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Websters Dictionary 1828
webstersdictionary1828.com › Dictionary › louse
Websters Dictionary 1828 - Webster's Dictionary 1828 - Louse
LOUSE, noun lous. plural lice. A small insect of the genus Pediculus. It has six feet, two eyes, with long feelers and a sting in the mouth.
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The simple answer is that you’re asking the question the wrong way about. In language, the central and most important way to inflect words is always what might be termed the ‘regular’ ones. The patterns that occur most frequently and are most flexible and applicable to the most roots. In English, the regular pluralising pattern is adding /z/ (with some assimilation and epenthesis rules). Everything else is irregular, including mouse/mice and louse/lice. So really, it makes more sense to ask why those aren’t mouses and louses in the plural.

If we look at it from a slightly more abstract angle and ask why these three words who are identical in the singular (except for the initial consonant) are different in the plural, we can answer it more usefully.

Let’s start with house(s). The reason why the plural of house is houses is that that ending is the regular pattern.1 That simple. In earlier stages of English, house had different plurals; but it was regularised to fit in with the most basic pattern of adding /z/. If we go back to Old English, the word was hūs (pronounced /huːs/, like ‘hooce’ in Modern English), and the plural was also hūs.

Mouse and louse were similarly mūs /muːs/ and lūs /luːs/ (like moose and loose) in Old English, but their plurals were mȳs /myːs/ and lȳs /lyːs/, respectively.

So why this difference?

Well, hūs is a neuter noun in Old English, while both mūs and lūs are feminine nouns. V0ight’s answer has already mentioned i-mutation (also known as i-affection), which is the historical cause of the different vowel in the plural of the latter two words. Historically, in Proto-Germanic, the plural ended in -iz (pronounced much like ‘-eez’ would be in English), and the high front vowel /i/ in that ending caused the preceding vowel to assimilate, to become more ‘ee-like’. And an /u/ that becomes more ‘ee-like’ almost always becomes /y/, as indeed it did in English. At some pre-English point in time, this final syllable was lost, but the change it had caused in the preceding vowel remained.

But this ‘ee-like’ plural ending was only used in the masculine and feminine genders; not in the neuter. In the neuter, there were various other ways of forming a plural, including not adding an ending at all. We can see from various comparative evidence that an earlier form of hūs also had an extra syllable lost by the time of Old English, but in hūs, the vowel in that extra syllable was an /a/, not an /i/ (Proto-Germanic *hūsa- was an a-stem, so its plural would have been *hūsō). Since there was no /i/, there was nothing to cause the i-mutation and change the /ū/ to /ȳ/.

So if we take it chronologically, starting from the Proto-Germanic stage, the development house and mouse went through went something like this (giving singular > plural pairs):

  1. hūsa- > hūsō // mūs > mūsiz (pre-English/Proto-Germanic: starting point)
  2. hūsa- > hūso // mūs > mȳsi(z) (pre-English: i-mutation, final syllables weakened)
  3. hūs > hūs // mūs > mȳs (~ Old English: loss of final syllables)
  4. hūs > hūs // mūs > mīs (late Old English: unrounding of /y/ to /i/)
  5. həus > həus(en/es) // məus > məis (Middle/Early Modern English: Great Vowel Shift diphthongisation of /uː/ and /iː/ to /əu/ and /əi/; house starts getting an explicit plural)
  6. haʊs ⟨house⟩ > haʊzəs ⟨houses⟩ // maʊs ⟨mouse⟩ > maɪs ⟨mice⟩ (Modern English: diphthongisation continued to /aʊ, aɪ/; alternative plurals of house disappear, leaving just one, regular plural)

If we focus on steps 3 and 4 here, you can see that hūs was the same in the singular and the plural, while mūs had a separate plural.

It is not uncommon for words that are under-marked (i.e., have different forms that are identical) to become marked (develop separate forms to make them less ambiguous), and that is indeed what happened to hūs here: people started applying the standard pattern of adding -es or -en (another formerly very common ending) to make it clearer that it’s a plural. That wasn’t (as) necessary for mūs, though, since the singular and plural forms were actually different there.

It does sometimes happen that a regular word becomes irregular if there is enough pressure (for example, dive has developed the past tense dove in American English because of the similarity to drove, strove, throve), but it is much, much more common that unpredictable, irregular forms are lost in favour of regular forms—so if anything were to happen in future to make the three words in this question the same, the expected development would be that mouse and louse become mouses and louses.

 


1 The ending is regular; the form as a whole is slightly irregular, since the stem-final consonant /s/ is most commonly (though not consistently) voiced before the plural ending. This is a pattern found with many words that end in unvoiced fricatives (/f θ s/); cf. mouth /maʊθ/ ~ mouths /maʊðz/, life /laɪf/ ~ lives /laivz/. For all three consonants, though, the plural voicing is sporadic and only happens sometimes—there is no rule.

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house comes from Old English/Old Saxon hūs and mouse comes from Old English/Old Saxon mūs (pronounced like the animal moose), but only the latter experienced the phenomenon known as "i-mutation", where the /u/ sound shifts to an /i/ [then eventually becoming /aɪ/] sound when the noun becomes plural as a shortcut in pronouncing it faster.

So mice used to be pronounced /my:s/ in Old English (similar to the ending sound of the word few), before the /y:/ changed to /i:/ in Middle English (similar to modern facetious pronunciation of plural meese for the animal moose) and then to /aɪ/ in late Middle/Early Modern English, where it eventually came to be pronounced like the word nice.


etymonline: house

etymonline: mouse

Plural form mice (Old English mys) shows effects of i-mutation:

etymonline: i-mutation


Wiktionary on Old English mūs

Wiktionary on Old Saxon hūs


...while house didn't go down the "i-mutation" path for whatever reason, probably because there wasn't much need back then to pluralize house while mice were everywhere, and were much more colloquial. Think about it: how often do you actually use the word houses?


Some English dialects even had housen as the plural of house:

Wiktionary ~ from Middle English housen


Top answer
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Hint: This question is from the topic of singular and plural nouns. The singular and plural forms of a noun indicate whether the noun is single or multiple in number. It is a very useful tool in English grammar. Plural words can be formed by adding ‘s’ at the end of most English words. Complete answer: Singulars and plurals are characteristics of nouns. Singular form indicates that a noun is single, or one in number. A plural form indicates that a noun is multiple, or more than one in number. Generally, we add an ‘s’ to the end of a singular noun to form a plural noun. For example one house – two houses, one car – three cars, one dog – four dogs, one house – five houses, etc. When nouns end with the letters; s, ch, sh, x, or z, then we add ‘es’ at the end of the singular noun to form the plural noun. For e.g. One bus – two buses, one dish – three dishes, etc.There are some nouns that have a very irregular plural noun. They do not follow any pattern and neither do they end with ‘s’. For e.g. man – men, radius - radii, woman - women, mouse – mice, tooth – teeth. Similarly, the words ‘louse’ and ‘lice’ given in the question are a pair of irregular singular and plural nouns, where ‘louse’ is the singular noun and ‘lice’ is the plural noun.Thus, the correct answer is Option (A) Yes.Note: When a word ends with ‘o’, two things can happen. Either it can be preceded by a vowel or by a consonant. When it is preceded by a vowel, we simply add an ‘s’ at the end of the word. For e.g. Zoozoos, video – videos, stereo – stereos, etc. When it is preceded by a consonant, we add an ‘es’ at the end of the word. For e.g. Hero – heroes, tomato – tomatoes, echo – echoes, etc.