Perditum sum means "I am ruined" in Latin, but only if the speaker is of the neuter gender. A man would say perditus sum; a woman, perdita sum.
The word pie is a neuter noun, a word for a thing that has no gender.poo
The word inchoate comes from the Latin and it means to make a beginning, to hitch up. It is an adjective, and his other forms could be a noun like inchoatness or inchoation or another adjective like inchoative.
The noun derives from the Latin root pulcher meaning beauty. It is usually a reference to a shapely or voluptuous feminine form, and as a slang reference to an ample female bosom. The adjective form is pulchritudinous.
is a form of = είναι μια μορφή του* / της**(*masc/neuter)(**feminine)
Sobrius is the Latin equivalent of 'staid'. It's an adjective in the masculine form. The feminine and neuter forms are 'sobria' and 'sobrium', respectively.
The Latin word for 'united' is coniunctus. It's a masculine gender adjective. The feminine and neuter forms are 'coniuncta' and 'coniunctum', respectively.
Soli is the Latin plural of 'solus'. The Latin adjective is in the masculine singular form. The feminine and neuter are 'sola' and 'solum', respectively. No matter the gender, the adjective means 'alone, only'.
The Latin equivalent of the English word 'cloudy' is Nubilus. The Latin word is a masculine gender adjective. The feminine and neuter forms are 'nubila' and 'nubilum', respectively.
Adjectives in Latin show gender. They may be feminine, masculine, or neuter to agree with nouns of the respectively same gender. For example, the Latin equivalent of the adjective 'human' is humanus, in the masculine singular form. It's humana, in the feminine; and humanum, in the neuter.
The Latin adjective acceptus (masculine), accepta(feminine), acceptum (neuter) means welcome, well-liked, well-received.
"Pulchrum vehiculum" is a Latin equivalent of "beautiful car."The neuter adjective "pulchrum" means "beautiful." The neuter noun "vehiculum" means "vehicle, conveyance." Latin has no equivalent to the English definite article "the." But the neuter numeral adjective/pronoun "unum," which means "one," may serve as a singular indefinite article in its meaning "a."The pronunciation is "pool-kroos veh-EE-koo-loom" in the liturgical Latin of the Church and "puhl-kroom veh-ih-kuh-loom" in the classical Latin of the ancient Romans.
Yes it is.Sena is the neuter form of the adjective senimeaning six of something, or six each of something.
Delirus is the Latin equivalent of 'delirious'. It's the masculine form of the adjective. The feminine and neuter forms are 'delira' and 'delirum', respectively. But whatever the form, the adjective also may be translated as 'silly, doting, crazy'.
Verbum is the Latin equivalent of 'word'. It's a neuter gender noun. It's the root for the adjective 'verbosus', which means 'copious, diffuse, wordy'. An adjective of the same meaning is found in the English equivalent, 'verbose'.
The Latin equivalent of the word 'first' is primus. That's the masculine form of the adjective. Latin words show gender. The feminine form is prima. The neuter form is primum.
"Beautiful car" is an English equivalent of "pulchrum vehiculum."The neuter adjective "pulchrum" means "beautiful." The neuter noun "vehiculum" means "vehicle, conveyance." Latin has no equivalent to the English definite article "the." But the neuter numeral adjective/pronoun "unum," which means "one," may serve as a singular indefinite article in its meaning "a."The pronunciation is "pool-kroos veh-EE-koo-loom" in the liturgical Latin of the Church and "puhl-kroom veh-ih-kuh-loom" in the classical Latin of the ancient Romans.