Forums or Fora? nm

Agreed: \"when in doubt, anglicise\"

I had a good row aboutthis with a headmaster. He insisted on using latin plurals which started with his use of the word "croci" to describe the flowers in the school garden, and finished with a row about the lack of definition in latin for the plural of virus, which is viruses in English according to the OED, indeclinable in the plural in latin, following 2nd declension neuter for singluar or plural.

The rule is "if in doubt, anglicise". There is no hard and fast rule, except that generally the latin plural form is used if using the latin on purpose, or refering to more than one forum.

On a lighter note, of course, you can simply folow the example of a man who wanted to buy twoo mongooses and wrote the zoo. But he then realised that he might be mistaken, so rewrote the latter asking for two mongeese. Eventually he just ordered one mongoose "but while you're about it send me two".
 
2nd declension neuter - not masculine

Think perhaps you are mixing up the 2nd declension masculine (where the nominative plural is indeed -i) with 2nd desclension neuter (as in forum) where the plural is as TK correctly defines is -a, hence fora. Latin dictionary will show "forum, fori" this second word being the gentive singular, not the plural.
 
Forsakeneuter

Actually you're all wrong its a verb

Foramo
Foramas
Foramat
Foramabo
Foramabus
Foruncle ... she cant be here so its his

Forest ... Colin Scott's
Forvroom ... MBF

ad infinitum

Nemo me impune lacessit, I think is the full thing Cap'n!

Jim
 
Re: Actually.......

I'm not a boy and consider myself young....ish.....and re teaching me.. I ran out of room in my timetable and thankfully latin was dumped! lol
 
Re: Forums

It must be forums. It would only be forae if the Latins had had computers. On computers its all American or English if you are lucky.

Talking about the Romans having computers: Driving along what was obviously an old Roman Road - straight as anything - we go over a railway bridge. My Dad was driving and turns to my new girlfriend (who at the time was taking History at University) and asks "This bridge is only about 50 years old, so have you any idea how the Romans crossed the railway?". A long discussion ensued about railway crossings and legionaires feet wearig the rails away.
 
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