The plural of sinus is sinuses.
Sinuses
No. It is the Latin singular.The Latin plural is bursae. The English plural is bursas.
In Latin est is singular. est plural is sunt
Plural: infantem
Gemini is written in Latin the identical way as it is written in English. It is a Latin word, the plural of twin or double.Gemini is written in Latin the identical way as it is written in English. It is a Latin word, the plural of twin or double.Gemini is written in Latin the identical way as it is written in English. It is a Latin word, the plural of twin or double.Gemini is written in Latin the identical way as it is written in English. It is a Latin word, the plural of twin or double.Gemini is written in Latin the identical way as it is written in English. It is a Latin word, the plural of twin or double.Gemini is written in Latin the identical way as it is written in English. It is a Latin word, the plural of twin or double.Gemini is written in Latin the identical way as it is written in English. It is a Latin word, the plural of twin or double.Gemini is written in Latin the identical way as it is written in English. It is a Latin word, the plural of twin or double.Gemini is written in Latin the identical way as it is written in English. It is a Latin word, the plural of twin or double.
The Latin plural is bursae. The English plural is bursas.
Alumna is a Latin word. (It is the feminine form of alumnus, plural alumni).And the feminine Latin plural of alumna is alumnae.
The English plural is terrariums. The Latin plural would be terraria.
The plural of the Latin noun "corpus" is corpora.
The Latin word for "road" is 'via.' The ablative plural of 'via' is 'viis.'
The Latin masculine noun draco (a snake) has the nominative plural form dracones