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does any one know what 'invincible' or invincibles' translates to in latin?

2007-05-13 08:29:50 · 4 answers · asked by dodd2k2 1 in Society & Culture Languages

4 answers

Invincible as adjective is 'invictus'. The ending changes based on what it modifies.

If you want a noun (an invincible), there is no specific Latin word. You would use 'vir invictus' - an invincible man, and 'vires invicti', invincible men.

Invincibilis as a word was not found in classic Latin.

2007-05-13 09:52:43 · answer #1 · answered by dollhaus 7 · 1 0

invictus
however, as with all latin words, the ending would change depen on the case the word was in

(singular)
nominative, -us
accusative, -um
genative, -i
dative, -o
ablative, -o

(plurul)
nominative, -i
accusative, -os
genative, -orum
dative, -is
ablative, -is

2007-05-14 08:52:35 · answer #2 · answered by star 2 · 0 0

stem- invinc

invincibilis, , invictus,

plural endings - ae (Nominative) , -is (dative)

-us endings singular Nominative

2007-05-13 09:02:27 · answer #3 · answered by Erika 2 · 0 1

English = "INVINCIBLE"

Latin = "INVICTA"

2007-05-13 22:47:39 · answer #4 · answered by Spike 6 · 0 2

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