Accusative singular: puerum
Accusative plural: pueros
The plural of change is changes.
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.
Change is singular, not plural. The plural form is changes.
The noun change becomes changes for the plural.
The plural of "contributes" is "contributes." The word itself does not change in its plural form.
puer means boy in the nominative case (singular). pueri means boy as well in the nominative case (plural). puerum means boy in the accusative case (singular). pueros means boy in the accusative case (plural)
You must mean the word mater (there is no matr). The accusative singular of this is matrem; the accusative plural matres.
singular is tu (nominative) plural is vos (nominative or accusative)
It is the Nominative, Vocative and Accusative Plural of 'Neck'
The accusative form of "you" in Latin is te in the singular and vos in the plural. This is the form used for the object of the verb, or the object of certain prepositions.
Eos = them. It's the 3rd person plural accusative case pronoun.
Puer translates as child, specially boy in Latin. While Pueri is the genitive of the word puer. Pueris a 2nd declension word, thus translates:Nominative: PuerGenitive: PueriDative: PueroAccusative: PuerumAblative: PueroHope this helps.Pueri is also the Nominative plural of puer, Pueri in the Nominative Plural means 'the boys' as the subject, whereas Pueri in the genitive means 'of the boy' (possession, analogous to 's)
About to carry (adjective describing femine plural accusative).
Argentariam is the accusative plural or argentarius- meaning banker.
"Vir," meaning "man" in Latin, is a masculine noun of the second declension. Its declension is as follows: nominative singular "vir," genitive singular "viri," dative singular "viro," accusative singular "virum," ablative singular "viro," and the nominative plural "viri." The genitive plural is "virorum," the dative plural is "viris," the accusative plural is "viros," and the ablative plural is "viris."
There is no such noun in Latin.The word senex means an old man, with the singular accusative form senem and the plural accusative senes.
The Latin word is naturalis. Like almost all Latin adjectives, naturalis varies in spelling according to how it's used. The following are all correct spellings, depending on context:naturalis - nominative singular masculine/feminine; genitive singular all gendersnaturale - nominative/accusative neuternaturalem - accusative singular masculine/femininenaturali - dative/ablative singular all gendersnaturales - nominative/accusative plural masculine/femininenaturalia - nominative/accusative plural neuternaturalium - genitive plural all gendersnaturalibus - dative/ablative all genders