Plural of forever; multiple instances or conceptualizations of eternal periods or endless times.
Plural of 'forever', from Old English 'fore' (completely) + 'ever' (always). The plural form is unusual since 'forever' is typically uncountable, making this a rare or poetic formation.
Using 'forevers' as a plural almost doesn't make sense—you can't have multiple instances of forever—which is exactly why poets and song writers loved it, because the impossibility is part of the beauty, like 'I love you for a thousand forevers.'
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