I suspect it would be Horti
The English plural is terrariums. The Latin plural would be terraria.
The plural of the Latin noun "corpus" is corpora.
The Latin plural is bursae. The English plural is bursas.
The Greek/Latin plural is carcinomata, the common English plural is carcinomas.
A "Pilus" is the Latin for a hair, so following the Latin rules for plurals, the plural is "pili".
Hortus is garden; horti is gardens.
"Hortus" is a Latin word that means "garden" or "orchard."
The Latin word for garden is hortus. We get the English word horticulture from it.
this stem comes from the Latin word hortus which means "garden"
"Garden" is an English equivalent of "hortus."The Latin word is a masculine noun. It has no singular definite article, because Latin does not have the equivalent of "the." But the masculine word "unus" means "one."
Hortus sapientiae
The English derivative of the Latin root 'hortus' is "horticulture," which refers to the practice of cultivating gardens and tending to plants.
The Latin word hortus is equivalent to "garden" in English language.
"Hortus loci" is Latin for "garden of the place." It refers to a garden that is specific to a certain location or area, often designed to showcase plants native to that region.
Nel giardino is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "in the garden."Specifically, the word nel combines the preposition in with the masculine definite article il to mean "in the." The masculine noun giardino means "garden."The pronunciation is "nehl djyahr-DEE-noh."
"Hortus" is a Latin equivalent of "garden."The Latin word is a masculine noun. Latin has no definite articles that would find their equivalents in the English "the." But the masculine word "unus" means "one."
The phrase Hortus Ortus is the Latin phrase for the English word Park. This is only used in terms of grounds, not as a way to stop your car.