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Latin declension - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Latin is an inflected language, and as such has nouns, pronouns, and adjectives that must be declined in order to serve a grammatical function. A set of declined forms of the same word pattern is call...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Latin_declension |
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Declension - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In linguistics, declension is the occurrence of inflection in nouns, pronouns and adjectives, indicating such features as number (typically singular vs. plural), case (subject, object, and so on), g...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Declension |
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Agricola (farmer) ends in -arum, the plural genitive, which shows possession. Because it's genitive, stick the words of the in front of the noun: of the farmers. ... Latin has five declensions; this article looks at the first two.
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They have a genitive plural ending in -"ium." A neuter i-stem noun, animal, animalis (animal), looks a little different from other neuter 3rd declension nouns in the plural because of the "i" which makes the nominative and accusative plural of animal: animalia. ... Please note: Latin Declensions...
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LOOK AT THE GENITIVE SINGULAR ENDING AND THE GENDER TO DETERMINE THE DECLENSION ... FIND THE STEM BY DROPPING THE ENDING FROM THE GENITIVE SINGULAR FORM ... RETURN TO LATIN RESOURCES...
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PERSON SINGULAR PLURAL; Nominative a ae; Genitive ae arum; Dative ae is; Accusative am as; Ablative a is; PERSON SINGULAR PLURAL; Nominative servus servi; Genitive servi servorum; Dative servo servis; Accusative servum servos; ... NOTE: The yellow indicates the endings that differ between the masculine and neuter declensions.
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Filed under: Downloadable Latin Resources — Robert Wermuth @ 11:40 pm ; Tags: Declensions, Latin, Nouns, PowerPoint; ... The “Satellite View” of the FIVE (5) LATIN NOUN DECLENSIONS (1 page JPEG))
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