Yes, "fora" is the plural form of "forum." However, "forums" is generally more commonly used in modern English.
fora
Forum---Plural Form Forums,Foreign Plural Form Forumina
The plural of forum can be either forums or fora, with forums being the more commonly used form in modern English.
The plural form of him, her, or it is them. (objective pronouns)
The plural form of the demonstrative pronoun 'that' is those.
No, the pleural form of forum is NOT fora. It is forums.
fora
The plural of forum can be either forums or fora, with forums being the more commonly used form in modern English.
Plural form of forum.
FORA plural for forum
Ancient Rome had perhaps too many fora to count. There was the main forum, the Forum Romanum, which was the main civic enter and the heart of the empire. Then there were the fora of Augustus and Julius Caesar, which were also civic and religious centers. They had special fora for the selling of fish, cattle and vegetables. These were the big ones. a Forum (plural=fora) was a marketplace, so any neighborhood square could have a few merchants selling goods and be called a forum.Ancient Rome had perhaps too many fora to count. There was the main forum, the Forum Romanum, which was the main civic enter and the heart of the empire. Then there were the fora of Augustus and Julius Caesar, which were also civic and religious centers. They had special fora for the selling of fish, cattle and vegetables. These were the big ones. a Forum (plural=fora) was a marketplace, so any neighborhood square could have a few merchants selling goods and be called a forum.Ancient Rome had perhaps too many fora to count. There was the main forum, the Forum Romanum, which was the main civic enter and the heart of the empire. Then there were the fora of Augustus and Julius Caesar, which were also civic and religious centers. They had special fora for the selling of fish, cattle and vegetables. These were the big ones. a Forum (plural=fora) was a marketplace, so any neighborhood square could have a few merchants selling goods and be called a forum.Ancient Rome had perhaps too many fora to count. There was the main forum, the Forum Romanum, which was the main civic enter and the heart of the empire. Then there were the fora of Augustus and Julius Caesar, which were also civic and religious centers. They had special fora for the selling of fish, cattle and vegetables. These were the big ones. a Forum (plural=fora) was a marketplace, so any neighborhood square could have a few merchants selling goods and be called a forum.Ancient Rome had perhaps too many fora to count. There was the main forum, the Forum Romanum, which was the main civic enter and the heart of the empire. Then there were the fora of Augustus and Julius Caesar, which were also civic and religious centers. They had special fora for the selling of fish, cattle and vegetables. These were the big ones. a Forum (plural=fora) was a marketplace, so any neighborhood square could have a few merchants selling goods and be called a forum.Ancient Rome had perhaps too many fora to count. There was the main forum, the Forum Romanum, which was the main civic enter and the heart of the empire. Then there were the fora of Augustus and Julius Caesar, which were also civic and religious centers. They had special fora for the selling of fish, cattle and vegetables. These were the big ones. a Forum (plural=fora) was a marketplace, so any neighborhood square could have a few merchants selling goods and be called a forum.Ancient Rome had perhaps too many fora to count. There was the main forum, the Forum Romanum, which was the main civic enter and the heart of the empire. Then there were the fora of Augustus and Julius Caesar, which were also civic and religious centers. They had special fora for the selling of fish, cattle and vegetables. These were the big ones. a Forum (plural=fora) was a marketplace, so any neighborhood square could have a few merchants selling goods and be called a forum.Ancient Rome had perhaps too many fora to count. There was the main forum, the Forum Romanum, which was the main civic enter and the heart of the empire. Then there were the fora of Augustus and Julius Caesar, which were also civic and religious centers. They had special fora for the selling of fish, cattle and vegetables. These were the big ones. a Forum (plural=fora) was a marketplace, so any neighborhood square could have a few merchants selling goods and be called a forum.Ancient Rome had perhaps too many fora to count. There was the main forum, the Forum Romanum, which was the main civic enter and the heart of the empire. Then there were the fora of Augustus and Julius Caesar, which were also civic and religious centers. They had special fora for the selling of fish, cattle and vegetables. These were the big ones. a Forum (plural=fora) was a marketplace, so any neighborhood square could have a few merchants selling goods and be called a forum.
Forum, but the usual plural is forums. Fora strikes me as monumentally pretentious. What's more, I doubt if many people understand it.
It was the Forum Magnum. Nowadays they call it Roman Forum. It was the largest of Rome's fora (plural of forum) and it was a forum civilium (civic centre).
Forum---Plural Form Forums,Foreign Plural Form Forumina
There probably were spell and potions sold in Rome. However, they would not have been sold at the Forum or Forum Magnum, as the Roman called it, (Roman Forum is a modern term. This forum was not a market. It Was a forum civilium; that is, a civic centre. The forum civilium was distinct and separate from the fora venalia (plural of forum venalium), the commercial fora, or markets.
The purpose of the Forum or Forum magnum (this is how the Romans called this forum, Roman Forum is a modern term) did not change; it was used in the same way. New fora (plural for forum) were added. The first new forum was built by Julius Caesar (the Forum of Caesar) during the Late Republic. The imperial fora which were added were: the Forum of Augustus, the Forum of Trajan, the Forum of Nerva and the Forum of Vespasian. The new fora were built to add to the glory of the men who commissioned them and because more space was needed for administrative buildings.
The city of Rome had several fora (plural of forum) venalia (plural of venalium). These were commercial fora, or markets which were separate from the forum civilium, which was the civic forum, the civic centre and the heart of a city and its public, political, judicial and administrative life. The fora venalia of the city of Rome were; the Forum Boarium (cattle market) the Forum Suarium (meat market) the Forum Piscarium (fish market) the Forum Holitorium (vegetable market) the Forum Vinarium (wine market) the Forum Pistorium (bakers' market) and the Forum Cuppedinis (delicatessen market).