The locative form of this declension ends for the singular in -ī
For the masculine and feminine, the nominative replaces the -is ending of the singular with an -es for the plural
The PIE ending of that case seems to be *-ewey for all genders, which is close
The
refers to a physical event (as in sending a letter), whereas the dative indicates some kind of benefit (as, for the information of
meus, mea, meum: of me, my/mine noster, nostra, nostrum: of us, our/ours tuus, tua, tuum: of you, you/yours (singular) vester, vestra, vestrum: of you/y'all/you guys
The actual sentence was "puella bona est" where both the noun for girl, puella, and the adjective for good
‘-ia’ for nominative, vocative and accusative neuter plural
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Positive Degree; Feminine Masculine Neuter; Singular; Nominative: Pulchra: Pulcher: Pulchrum: Genitive: Pulchrae: Pulchri: Pulchri: Dative: Pulchrae: Pulchro: Pulchro Positive Degree; Masculine/Feminine Neuter; Singular; Nominative: Celer: Celere: Genitive: Celeris: Celeris: Dative: Celeri: Celeri: Accusative: Celerem: Celere The endings on Latin nouns of the second declension, which is characterized by an "-o"
In our Latin word list, first and second declension adjectives are written ‘novus, -a, -um’
(6 times in the Od When I first looked into Latin, I saw in a textbook that the dative and ablative singular are the same in the second declension: nom
I've copied the relevant section from Allen and Greenough below: The regular form of the ablative singular of i-stems would be -ī
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refers to a physical event (as in sending a letter), whereas the dative indicates some kind of benefit (as, for the information of
With that in mind, an introduction such as Ad M
384
Hence it is sometimes called the adjective case, to distinguish it from the dative and the ablative, which may be called adverbial cases
0 License Usually, when a neuter case ending is different from the non-neuter ending in the same declension, the difference is in the nominative or accusative case (e
105) so far as man's nature is superior to brutes
Latin has three genders (masculine, feminine and neuter), similar to many other Indo-European languages