In Latin, the ending for the genitive plural of the 1st declension noun is -arum: femina, feminarum.
If you're talking about Latin then the ending would be -ae. For example in Latin you'd say "of the water" as "aquae". If it's not Latin you're talking about, then I have no idea.
Yes - "opportunity" is singular; "opportunities" is plural. From Latin "opportunitas" 3rd declension, I believe.
By a suffix of 's if the noun does not end in the letter s or is singular and simply by a suffix of ' for a plural noun that does end in the letter s.
By a suffix of 's if the noun does not end in the letter s or is singular and simply by a suffix of ' for a plural noun that does end in the letter s.
Bacterium. The plural form -a comes from Latin, where a 2nd declension neuter noun's singular is -um and its plural is -a. You can see the same from datum, data;
The singular form for the plural noun chateaux is chateau.
i took latin for 3 years but i 5-8 what i remember is that an ending is taken place on the noun or verb to show possesion or "of the" it depends on the declension of the noun. 1st: -ae(sing), -arum (pl) 2nd: -i, -orum 3rd: -is, -um 4th: -us, -um 5th: -ei, -erum This is called genitive case.
You can tell what declension a Latin noun is by looking at the noun's genitive singular form.
Regione is the ablative singular form of the Latin word regio, which means "region." Regio is a third-declension feminine noun and has the genitive regionis.
The Latin word cīvitās in the nominative case, cīvitātis in the genitive, is a third declension feminine noun.
interventus (genitive, interventus) This is a fourth declension masculine noun.
"Freedom" in Latin is the feminine third-declension noun libertas (genitive libertatis).
The Latin word for "color" is color, a masculine noun of the 3rd declension (genitive coloris).
The Latin masculine noun collis (a hill) has a singular genitive collis and a plural genitive collium.
To decline the Latin noun "nomen" (name), you would follow the third declension pattern. The nominative singular is "nomen," genitive singular is "nominis," dative singular is "nomini," accusative singular is "nomen," ablative singular is "nomine," nominative plural is "nomina," genitive plural is "nominum," dative plural is "nominibus," accusative plural is "nomina," and ablative plural is "nominibus."
No. Either genitive singular or nominative plural.
The Latin word for "citizen" is civis. This is a 3rd-declension i-stem noun (thus genitive singular civis, genitive plural civium) of common gender, meaning it can be either masculine or feminine depending on context.
The Latin masculine noun tumulus (a rounded hill, a burial mound or grave) has the genitive singular tumuli and genitive plural tumulorum.