Pericula.
singular is tu (nominative) plural is vos (nominative or accusative)
No. Either genitive singular or nominative plural.
The Latin masculine noun draco (a snake) has the nominative plural form dracones
"filiae" is the nominative plural of "filia."
Matres.
Periculum is danger in Latin. Periculum is also used in English for danger or risk.
In nominative case: You (singular) = tu You (plural) = vos
It is the Nominative, Vocative and Accusative Plural of 'Neck'
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.
Islands. It's feminine nominative plural.
periculum, ausus, alea
Quae sunt omnes Latinae radices et exempla is the Latin equivalent of 'What are all the Latin roots and examples'.In the word by word translation, the feminine gender interrogative pronoun 'quae', in the nominative plural, means 'what'. The verb 'sunt', in the third person plural of the present indicative of the infinitive 'esse', means '[they] are'. The feminine gender adjective 'omnes',* in the nominative plural, means 'all'. The feminine gender adjective 'Latinae', in the nominative plural, means 'Latin'. The feminine gender noun 'radices', in the nominative plural, means 'roots'. The conjunction 'et' means 'and'. The neuter gender noun 'exemplo', in the nominative plural, means 'examples'.*When an adjective in Latin modifies two nouns at the same time, and the two nouns are of different genders, the gender of the adjective generally agrees with whichever noun is closest to it in the sentence.