Well you could use the latin word for brave which is Amimus. And the latin word for heart which is Cor.
If you are looking for the meaning of accusative in latin my competance is not good enough, but if you are looking for just the word in latin it is accusativus
The accusative word for Pictor in latin is Picturam.
vir (in the nominative case) and vim in the accusative case) Both 3rd declension nouns
mercatorem is the accusative case version of the latin word mercator meaning merchant.
The word 'naturam' is the form of the Latin word 'natura' in the accusative case. A word in the accusative case is called the direct object, because it is on the receiving end of the direct action of the verb. The English equivalent of the word 'naturam' is the following: nature. And the Latin pronunciation is as follows: nah-TOO-rahm.
fundos- farms. (plural, 2nd person, accusative case [noun].)
You must mean the word mater (there is no matr). The accusative singular of this is matrem; the accusative plural matres.
puer means boy in the nominative case (singular). pueri means boy as well in the nominative case (plural). puerum means boy in the accusative case (singular). pueros means boy in the accusative case (plural)
Latin is a language that uses case endings to show the relationship of the parts of speech to the verb and to the rest of the sentence. The Latin word 'fustem' is in the accusative case, as a direct object. It meaning is club, cudgel, staff or stick.
Ad astra per aspera is the Latin equivalent of 'To the stars at all costs'. In the word by word translation, the preposition 'ad' means 'to'. The noun 'astra', in the accusative case, means 'the stars'. The preposition 'per' means 'by, through'. The noun 'aspera', in the accusative case, means 'roughnesses, rough places'.
Magistram is the accusative singular form of the word magistra, which means "mistress." The accusative case is used for direct objects and for the objects of certain prepositions such as ad ("to") and apud ("near; at the home of").
Makes it accusative.