The second declension masculine* endings are:
singular:
nominative: -er, -ir, -us
genitive: -ī
dative: -ō
accusative: -um
ablative: -ō
plural:
nominative: -ī
genitive: -ōrum
dative: -īs
accusative: -ōs
ablative: -īs
Words in -ir add the oblique endings directly to the nominative form (vir -> virī); some words in -er drop the -e- before adding oblique endings (magister -> magistrī), while some don't (puer -> puerī). Words in -ius often form the genitive singular in -ī (not -iī).
Words in -us form the vocative singular in -e; words in -ius form the vocative singular in -ī. In all other cases the the vocative is identical with the nominative.
Deus has some irregular forms, including nominative plurals dī and diī in addition to deī.
(*Strictly speaking, these are not masculine endings, but non-neuter ones. There is a small group of feminine 2nd-declension nouns in -us, mostly the names of trees, islands and cities, that are declined in exactly the same way.)
The second declension vocative ending for the masculine singular is '-e'. For the masculine plural and neuter singular and plural, the vocative ending is the same as the nominative ending.
Hortus is a noun of the second declension in Latin. It is masculine and means "garden." The genitive form is "horti," which is used to indicate possession. As a second declension noun, it follows the typical endings for that category.
In Latin, genitive nouns typically have endings that vary based on their declension. For example, first declension nouns usually end in "-ae" in the singular genitive (e.g., "puella" becomes "puellae"), while second declension nouns often end in "-i" (e.g., "servus" becomes "servi"). Third declension nouns have a more varied set of endings, often ending in "-is" (e.g., "rex" becomes "regis"). These endings indicate possession or relation in the context of the sentence.
um a i orum o is um a o is
Tempus is a neuter noun of the third declension. Its genitive is temporis.The complete declension is:Singularnom./voc. tempusgen. temporisdat. temporīacc. temporemabl. temporePluralnom./voc. temporagen. temporumdat. temporibusacc. temporaabl. temporibus
The 3rd declension masculine endings in Latin typically include -is in the genitive singular, -i in the dative singular, -em in the accusative singular, and -es in the nominative and accusative plural.
WARD in Latin is Defendo in first declension. fendere in second declension. fendi in third, and fensum in fourth.
The third is the declension of the Latin word vēritās. The feminine, third declension noun in its singular nominative or vocative form translates as "truth" in English. The pronunciation will be "WEY-ree-TAS" in Church and classical Latin.
Paeninsulis is either the dative plural or the ablative plural of paeninsula, -ae, f., "peninsula". The full declension is:SingularNominative/vocative: paeninsulaGenitive: paeninsulaeDative: paeninsulaeAccusative: paeninsulamAblative: paeninsulaPluralNominative/vocative: paeninsulaeGenitive: paeninsularumDative: paeninsulisAccusative: paeninsulasAblative: paeninsulis
The Latin for "word" is verbum, a second declension neuter.
If you are asking about the vocative, or "calling" case, it is used by inflected languages for direct address. In Latin, for example, the word lord is dominus for the nominative subject of the verb, as in Dominus vobiscum ( the lord is with you ), and domine for the vocative of address, as in Non nobis, Domine ( not to us, O Lord). The different endings on the words do for Latin what word-order does for English, which is to show who does what to whom.
Third declension.