Men in Sparta trained for military service from a young age, participated in athletic competitions, and served as soldiers in the Spartan army. Women played a role in managing household affairs and raising children, with some engaging in physical training to maintain their fitness. Children were raised with an emphasis on discipline, toughness, and loyalty to the state.
singular form = ox, plural = oxen singular form = man, plural = men single = child, plural = children single = woman, plural = women
Some examples of plural nouns not ending with 's' are children, men, women, mice, and geese.
mouse-mice foot-feet goose-geese man-men woman-women
The sentence "Women, without men, are savages" contains the appropriate punctuation to make it clear that it is women who are being described as savages when they are without men. The commas help to set off the phrase "without men" as additional information.
cherubim criteria paparazzi cacti alumni oxen children memoranda vertebrae men women geese teeth mice people
only sparta.
No. Sparta didn't grant citizenship to very many men, either.
They looked after the farm and the children
Athens
Both
Yes, gay men can have children with women.
In Sparta both. In Athens, the men, with the women confined in the home doing domestic tasks.
Children, textiles, garden and barnyard foods.
men-to strengthen the army women-to defend the city while men were at war
they train them and the women have to cook for the men
Other than military service.
the men would train while the women caught food.