Neither! It's a verb. It means he, she it sees.
The English word for 'videt' (Latin) is 'sees'. We get the words 'video', 'videotape' from the Latin 'videt'.
"Videt."
He sees.
Videt.
The English word for "videt" is "sees." It is derived from Latin, where "videt" is the third person singular form of the verb "videre," meaning "to see."
The accusitive form of "dura" or "durus" which means "hard, solid or difficult."
It's called the same thing in Latin grammar; although it's referred to as the "nominative case" instead of the predicate nominative.
singular is tu (nominative) plural is vos (nominative or accusative)
No. Either genitive singular or nominative plural.
Pericula.
"Venalicius tonsorum videt" translates to "The barber sees the barber" in English. The phrase is derived from Latin, where "venalicius" refers to a barber or hairdresser, "tonsorum" is a form of "tonsor," meaning barber, and "videt" means "sees." The phrase can imply a sense of mutual recognition or shared profession among barbers.
That depends on how it is being used. Multus (masculine), Multa (feminine), Multum (neuter) are the three genders in the nominative. You have to match the adj (multus) to the noun it is modifying. e.g. I have many slaves. 'multum servum habeo.' Multum is the accusitive (case) singular (number) masculine (gender), matching servus in gender number and case.