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What is Latin for women?

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Latin words follow a declension pattern which determines how the word will appear in its singular or plural form depending on its place in the context of a sentence. The word "women" comes from "femina, feminae, f" in Latin and follows the first declension. The following are all of the plural forms of "femina"

Nominitive: feminae (subject: "the women")
Vocative: feminae (summon: "women!")
Accusative: feminas (direct object: "the women")
Genitive: feminarum (possessive: "of the women/women's)
Dative: feminis (indirect object: "to/for the women")
Ablative: feminis (ablative: "by/with/in/on/from the women")

If you just want to say the word, "women", use "feminae"


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First answer by HisPowr4U. Last edit by Traz. Contributor trust: 147 [recommend contributor]. Question popularity: 4 [recommend question]

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