um a i orum o is um a o is
'Forum' (a neuter, 2nd declension noun) is used in Latin for "marketplace."
Bellum is a 2nd declension neuter noun meaning "war". Neuter nouns have a plural ending in -a, so the plural of bellum is bella.
I believe it is Iacobus, 2nd Declension
I think it's "tonitrus." 2nd declension i believe.
Gladius means "Sword" in Latin. This is 2nd declension nominative singular. If it was to be used in the Pleural the word used would be Gladii.
'Forum' (a neuter, 2nd declension noun) is used in Latin for "marketplace."
Bellum is a 2nd declension neuter noun meaning "war". Neuter nouns have a plural ending in -a, so the plural of bellum is bella.
Disease is not a Latin word. The word for disease in Latin is morbis, morbi (neuter, 2nd declension). The word disease comes from Old French, not Latin.
There is no Latin word castle; there is castellum a 2nd declension neuter noun meaning watch tower or military outpost from which castle was eventually derived.
Vintum means wine. the gender is neuter. And the word is 2nd declension.
I believe it is Iacobus, 2nd Declension
I think it's "tonitrus." 2nd declension i believe.
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.
tornado in Latin is turbo turbis with a macron over the "o". turbo is a masculine 2nd declension noun
The word is derived from the Latin word "census" which declines as a 2nd declension noun.
The second declension masculine* endings are: singular: nominative: -er, -ir, -us genitive: -ī dative: -ō accusative: -um ablative: -ō plural: nominative: -ī genitive: -ōrum dative: -īs accusative: -ōs ablative: -īs Words in -ir add the oblique endings directly to the nominative form (vir -> virī); some words in -er drop the -e- before adding oblique endings (magister -> magistrī), while some don't (puer -> puerī). Words in -ius often form the genitive singular in -ī (not -iī). Words in -us form the vocative singular in -e; words in -ius form the vocative singular in -ī. In all other cases the the vocative is identical with the nominative. Deus has some irregular forms, including nominative plurals dī and diī in addition to deī. (*Strictly speaking, these are not masculine endings, but non-neuter ones. There is a small group of feminine 2nd-declension nouns in -us, mostly the names of trees, islands and cities, that are declined in exactly the same way.)
Perhaps "laboratorium" (2nd decl., neuter), literally "a place where work is done.