Romanes eunt domusIt should be 'diem patris' as the father in father's is singular so 'day' will also take the singular. Don't they teach you anything over there?
Its genitive singular "day of." Father is the subject so its nominative singular. You don't match cases of the words, just whether it's singular or plural.It should be 'diem patris' as the father in father's is singular so 'day' will also take the singular. Don't they teach you anything over there?
Probably, it's been at least 17 years since I sat in a Latin class. Got up to Latin 2, the basic requirement for high school.Your understanding of grammar is faulty.
You can't tell me what to do. You're not my father!For father's day I would like to not argue about Latin genative case
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There's no sucn thing as genative.For father's day I would like to not argue about Latin genative case
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Probably, it's been at least 17 years since I sat in a Latin class. Got up to Latin 2, the basic requirement for high school.
I enjoyed it, and would have likely continued, but the teacher was insistent that all her students study for the Florida Junior Classical League so that they could then go on to the National Junior Classical League and I was never that into the competition. She had a fairly decent reputation at that thing over the years.
For father's day I would like to not argue about Latin genative case
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Uggg just another motherfucker thread