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A group of Latin nouns are called declensions. Latin was the language of ancient Rome.
Ask the three nouns
There are actually several Latin translations for the English "success". The nouns "successus" (successful result), "prosperitas" (prosperity), and "secundum" (lucky achievement) are three possibilities.
Some feminine Latin nouns that don't end in -a include "civitas" (city), "finis" (boundary), and "urbs" (city).
Latin has the neuter nouns fatum and exitium for "doom".
The word 'free' is an adjective in English and in Latin. Latin gives feminine, masculine or neuter gender to its nouns. Adjectives must agree in gender with the nouns or pronouns that they modify. Therefore, the adjective 'free' takes three forms in the singular, and three forms in the plural. In the masculine, the adjective is liber in the singular, and liberi in the plural. In the feminine, it's libera in the singgular, and liberae in the plural. In the neuter, it's liberum in the singular, and libera in the plural.
Those languages are all from different language families, but here is what they have in common:All three languages are Indo-European languagesAll three are written with variations of the Latin alphabetAll three are written left to rightAll three contain many borrowed words from EnglishAll three have masculine and feminine nouns (Polish and German also have neuter nouns)
person, number
the human characteristics in Chile are that they are Latin American.
There are three nouns. Doctor, dentist, and neighbors are nouns.
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it is the third and 4th dative and ablative in nouns