Multiple people who beguile; several charmers, enchanters, or deceivers.
Plural form of 'beguiler,' formed by adding the standard '-s' suffix to indicate more than one person who beguiles.
English plurals are deceptively simple on the surface—just add '-s'—but they hide layers of history: some '-er' words (like 'bakers') pluralize by '-s,' while irregular words (like 'children') use ancient grammar we inherited from Anglo-Saxon.
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