Each latin noun has five forms referred to as declension.
A typical Latin noun will have five different cases: the nominative, which is the subject case, the genitive, usually used for possession, the dative, usually used for indirect object, the accusative, usually used for direct object, and ablative, which is usually used to describe positions, e.g. in the city (in urbe), under the bridge (sub ponte). The way these forms are spelled differs from declension to declension.
There are five noun delensions in the Latin language.
You can tell what declension a Latin noun is by looking at the noun's genitive singular form.
The Latin translation for "beautiful" is pulcher, -chra, -chrum, with forms that vary according to the gender of the noun. E.g., "The daughter is beautiful": filia est pulchra.
Gusto is a noun originating from the 1620's word gusto meaning taste, and the Latin gustus. It is a root that forms the word for "taste" in both Greek and Latin.
'You' is not a verb, it is a noun. In Latin, the noun 'you' would be translated 'tu.'
Miles is the basic word for soldier in latin. The other forms have the base milit- (where the English word military comes from)
The noun 'Latin' is a proper noun, the name of a specific language and the name of a specific culture. A proper noun is always capitalized.
the root word of acquit is the Latin quietus = free, but it passed through ancient french and middle English on its way to us.
Latin is case sensitive for all of its nouns, pronouns, and adjectives. The use of each noun or pronoun in a sentence determines what case ending the noun or pronoun will have. For example, if the noun is used as a subject or as a predicate nominative, it will have a nominative case ending. So also in the case of a noun used as a direct object, the noun will have an accusative case ending appended.
No. The base noun emotion is from the Latin emovere (to move, as with emotion, to emote).The suffix -al forms the adjective.
The noun forms for the word jubilant are jubilation and jubilance.