No. Either genitive singular or nominative plural.
Noun: it is a noun, an object or a person, not an adjective or a verb. Words such as "Peter", "bread", "flower" and "car" are all nouns. Singular: it is not plural, just one. As for "nominative"... Nominative means the word is serving as a SUBJECT in the sentence, the one doing the action. It is a terminology that applies only to languages that have "grammatical cases", such as Latin, classical Arabic and some Eastern European languages: this means a word slightly changes (usually in the ending) according to the purpose they serve in a sentence. In latin if you want to say Peter is a good guy, you should say Petrus est homo bonus. Where "Petrus", the subject of the sentence, is a nominative singular noun :-) hope that helped
"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
Omnia is correct; omnis is either a nominative or a genitive singular noun ending.
Vocative singular is filiVocative plural is filiiThe vocative is the same as the nominative, but when a noun ends in "ius", that piece is replaced with "i". The vocative plural remains the same as the nominative plural.
Opus Dei is the Latin equivalent of 'God's work'. In the word by word translation, the noun 'opus', in the nominative singular case as the subject of the sentence, means 'work'. The noun 'Dei', in the genitive singular case as the object of possession, means 'of God'.
The English equivalent of 'Vires, veritas, veneratio, aequitas' is Powers, truth, reverence, equity. The noun 'vires' is the nominative or accusative plural of 'vis', which means 'strength, power'. The noun 'veritas' is in the nominative singular, and means 'truth'. The noun 'veneratio' is in the nominative singular, and means 'reverence'. The noun 'aequitas' is in the nominative singular, and means 'evenness'.
That is Latin for "unconquered truth" veritas means truth and is a third declension feminine noun in the nominative case and singular form invicta means unconquered/invincible and is a first/second declension adjective in the nominative case, singular form, and feminine gender in order to agree with the noun it modifies in number, case, and gender (in accordance with the rules of Latin grammar). The adjective usually follows the noun in Latin so a better rendering would be "veritas invicta"
Clans or Families is the English equivalent of 'gentes'. The Latin word is a feminine gender noun that's in the nominative plural as the subject of the sentence. The nominative singular form is 'gens'. An English derivative is 'gentile'.
Salus is the root word for 'salutations'. It's a feminine gender noun. The particular form that serves as the root is in the nominative singular, as the subject of a sentence.
Quaternus is a Latin equivalent of the English word "notebook." It serves as the singular nominative form of a masculine noun used as the subject of a phrase or sentence. The pronunciation will be "kwa-TER-noos" in Church and classical Latin.
In Latin, "nauta" is a masculine noun, meaning "sailor" or "seaman." It belongs to the first declension, and its nominative singular form is "nauta." When using this term in a sentence, it would take masculine forms of adjectives and pronouns.
Virtus is the feminine singular nominative case of the noun, and virtutis is the genetive singular case