Viri could be the genitive singular or the nominative (or vocative) plural of the Latin vir, a male person; or it might be the genitive singular of virus, a slime or snake venom.
The genitive or "possessive" case is used to show possession or similar relation. The mark of the genitive in English nouns is -'s ( "apostrophe ess ") for all singular nouns and for all plural nouns not ending in -s, and a simple apostrophe for all plural nouns ending in -s. Some Genitives in -'s: The girl's dress; Socrates's punishment; men's clothing. Some in -': The girls' dresses; the Joneses' house.
SOPs is the plural of SOP (Standard Operating Procedure); SOP's, the "s" could be the abbreviation of the genitive case or of the to be verb.
Glasses are a plural form for glass (a drinking glass, or a lens). To indicate the plural of glasses (eyewear, a pair of eyeglasses), you would have to use the description "pairs of glasses."
In Latin, the ending for the genitive plural of the 1st declension noun is -arum: femina, feminarum.
Pater is "father." Omnium is the genitive plural of Omnes, which means "all". Together they mean "father of all."
The form farmers' is the plural possessive form.
The Latin masculine noun collis (a hill) has a singular genitive collis and a plural genitive collium.
Servorum.
The Latin masculine noun tumulus (a rounded hill, a burial mound or grave) has the genitive singular tumuli and genitive plural tumulorum.
Classical Latin prefers the verb at the end of the sentence (it is a subject-object-verb language, unlike English which is a subject-verb-object language). The verb can appear in other positions, but usually for poetic or prosaic effect.The genitive plural of stella is stellarum, not stellae.So a more usual order would be: Omnes pulvis stellarum sumus.
In Latin it means "of the horses" (genitive plural of "equus").
You mean genitive? Sororum.
Being a preposition, beside has no plural form. The word besides, meaning "also," is not a plural form, but rather an adverbial genitive.
O all you is the English equivalent of 'O vos omnes'. In the word by word translation, the interjection 'o' means 'o'. The personal possessive pronoun 'vos' means 'you'. The plural 'omnes' means 'all'.
Genitive plural of 'finitimus' (neighboring, adjacent).
No. Either genitive singular or nominative plural.