Matre
Deo is the dative or ablative singular form of the word deus, "god". Standing by itself it's probably dative: "to or for a god", "to/for the god", "to/for God". If it follows a preposition it's ablative, for example a deo, "by [a/the] god".
"Vir," meaning "man" in Latin, is a masculine noun of the second declension. Its declension is as follows: nominative singular "vir," genitive singular "viri," dative singular "viro," accusative singular "virum," ablative singular "viro," and the nominative plural "viri." The genitive plural is "virorum," the dative plural is "viris," the accusative plural is "viros," and the ablative plural is "viris."
"Clavicordium." Also, I believe this is a neuter noun which means it will be conjugated like this: Nominative Singular: Clavicordium Genitive Singular: Clavicordii Accustive Singular: Clavicordium Ablative Singular: Clavicordio Nominative Plural: Clavicordia Genetive Plural: Clavicordorum Accusative Plural: Clacicordia Ablative Plural: Clavicordiis
To decline the Latin noun "nomen" (name), you would follow the third declension pattern. The nominative singular is "nomen," genitive singular is "nominis," dative singular is "nomini," accusative singular is "nomen," ablative singular is "nomine," nominative plural is "nomina," genitive plural is "nominum," dative plural is "nominibus," accusative plural is "nomina," and ablative plural is "nominibus."
Ablative singular of 'sedes', meaning "seat, chair" or "residence."
Who eats in this way is the English equivalent of 'Quis in hoc modo edit'. In the word by word translation, the interrogative 'quis' is in the nominative singular as the subject of the sentence, and means 'who'. The preposition 'in' means 'in'. The demonstrative 'hoc' is in the ablative singular as the object of the preposition, and means 'this'. The noun 'modo' is in the ablative singular, and means 'manner, way'. The verb 'edit' means '[he/she/it] does eat, eats, is eating'.
I, who at this moment heard from you about my author, will respond in a short time is the English equivalent of 'Ego qui nunc de auctore meo audivi vobis brevi tempore referam'.In the word by word translation, the personal pronoun 'ego', in the first person singular, means 'I'. The masculine gender relative pronoun 'qui', in the nominative singular as the subject of the dependent clause, means 'who'. The adverb 'nunc' means 'now'. The preposition 'de' means 'about, after, away from, down from, during'. The masculine gender noun 'auctore', in the ablative singular, means 'ancestor, author, originator, supporter'. The possessive adjective/pronoun 'meo', in the ablative of 'meus', means '[after, away, from, with] my'. The verb 'audivi', in the first person singular of the perfect indicative of 'audire', means '[I] have heard, heard'. The personal pronoun 'vobis', in the second person plural and as the dative or ablative of 'vos', means '[from, to, with] you'. The neuter gender adjective 'brevi', in the ablative singular, means '[from, in, with] short'. The neuter gender noun 'tempore', in the ablative singular of 'tempus', means '[from, in, with] time'. The verb 'referam', in the first person singular of the future indicative of 'referre', means '[I] will answer, bring again, carry back, deliver, repeat'.
Seven: nominative, genitive, dative, accusative, ablative, vocative, locative.
Cloud is the English equivalent of 'nimbo'. The Latin word is a masculine gender noun. It's the singular form, in the ablative case, as the object of a preposition.
Louse (cinifes) is a 3rd Declension Feminine (Yes, Romans were blatantly sexist) noun. Thus: cinifes -- the/a louse (subject)---------Nominative Singular cinifis -- of the louse/ the louse's------Genitive Singular cinifi -- to/for the louse-------------------Dative Singular cinifem -- a louse (direct object)--------Accusative Singular cenife -- by/with/from the louse--------Ablative Singular cinifes -- the lice (subject)-------------Nominative Plural cinifum -- of the lice---------------------Genitive Plural cinifibus -- to/for the lice---------------Dative Plural cinifes -- the lice (direct object)-------Accusative Plural cinifibus -- by/with/from the lice------Ablative Plural
The Latin word is naturalis. Like almost all Latin adjectives, naturalis varies in spelling according to how it's used. The following are all correct spellings, depending on context:naturalis - nominative singular masculine/feminine; genitive singular all gendersnaturale - nominative/accusative neuternaturalem - accusative singular masculine/femininenaturali - dative/ablative singular all gendersnaturales - nominative/accusative plural masculine/femininenaturalia - nominative/accusative plural neuternaturalium - genitive plural all gendersnaturalibus - dative/ablative all genders
Regione is the ablative singular form of the Latin word regio, which means "region." Regio is a third-declension feminine noun and has the genitive regionis.