What the Latin word femina means in English is woman. To saw women you say feminae.
It means that a noun or adjective is feminine gender and must be declined a certain way--often for agreement.
Feminarum means "of the women" or "women's." It is the plural genitive form of femina, which means "woman" or "wife."
Women; of the woman; to/for the woman.
Woman.
The women watch.
Feminae is a plural noun, of Latin-origin, meaning "of the female gender".
Feminae.
feminae
Portantne feminae aquam? in Latin is "Are (the) women carrying water?" or "Do (the) women carry water?" in English.
Deus et feminae.
quattuor feminae
feminae fortis. (fem i ni) (for tis)
Women.If I remember correctly, femina means woman and feminae is its plural.
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"== ==
Pulchritudo feminae formosae similis musicae est.
women