Alumna is a Latin word. (It is the feminine form of alumnus, plural alumni).
And the feminine Latin plural of alumna is alumnae.
The noun alumnae is already plural. The singular is alumna (female graduate).
The singular alumnus has the Latin plural alumni.
No, the word alumnae is the plural form of the noun alumna, a female graduate of a school, college, or university. The plural form of the noun alumnus is alumni, male graduates of a school, college, or university.
Latin 'alumna' is the feminine of alumnus, a male graduate or former student of a school, college or university.The plural of alumna is alumnae, meaning female graduates.The English possessive is formed by adding an apostrophe +s, so the possessive of the plural of alumnae would be alumnae's.Example sentence: The military academy is particularly aware of the need to give special attention to alumnae's personal needs in an environment that has traditionally been an exclusively male one.
Alumna is the feminine form. pupil is the English word. In spanish a female pupil is called alumna and male is called alumno. Usually in Spanish words ending in a are femenine and ending in o masculine.
of Alumna
Problem is singular, not plural. The plural form is problems.
The plural form of alumna is alumnae.
The plural of alumnus is alumni. (The plural of alumna is alumnae)
The word alumnae is a plural noun, and the singular is alumna. An alumna is a female graduate of a college, school, or university, the female equivalent of alumnus (plural alumni).
Alumni is the plural of alumnus; the feminine form alumni is alumnae. The feminine form of alumnus is alumna.
The word alumnae is a plural noun, and the singular is alumna. An alumna is a female graduate of a college, school, or university, the female equivalent of alumnus (plural alumni).
No, the word alumnae is the plural form of the noun alumna, a female graduate of a school, college, or university. The plural form of the noun alumnus is alumni, male graduates of a school, college, or university.
If a sister and brother graduate from the same school, she is an "alumna" (plural "alumnae") and he is an "alumnus" (plural "alumni").
The word 'alumni' is already a plural. Alumni is the plural of the singular word alumnus. The feminine form of alumnus is alumna, and the plural of alumna is alumnae.
The feminine of alumnus is alumna (plural alumnae). The opposite of an alumnus is a dropout.
A female alumnus is an alumna (plural alumnae).
Latin 'alumna' is the feminine of alumnus, a male graduate or former student of a school, college or university.The plural of alumna is alumnae, meaning female graduates.The English possessive is formed by adding an apostrophe +s, so the possessive of the plural of alumnae would be alumnae's.Example sentence: The military academy is particularly aware of the need to give special attention to alumnae's personal needs in an environment that has traditionally been an exclusively male one.
The feminine form of alumnus is alumna. The feminine plural is alumnae.