nonae
Latin
Etymology
From nonus (“ninth”). As a day, from the Latin practice of treating most recurring calendrical days as plurals.[1][2]
Numeral
nōnae
Alternative forms
Inflection
First declension.
| Case | Plural |
|---|---|
| Nominative | nōnae |
| Genitive | nōnārum |
| Dative | nōnīs |
| Accusative | nōnās |
| Ablative | nōnīs |
| Vocative | nōnae |
Descendants
- English: nones
Citations
- Kennedy, Benjamin Hall, The Public School Latin Grammar (1879), p. 126.
- Michels, Agnes Kirsopp, Calendar of the Roman Republic (2015), p. 19.
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