Skip Navigation
Search
Search Keywords...
Open Menu

: Typically used for an adult woman, often with connotations of social standing or character in Latin prose.

Scholars like Francesca Santoro L'Hoir have explored the "Rhetoric of Gender Terms" in Latin prose, noting that authors like Cicero and Tacitus used these specific words as rhetorical devices to delineate character or make value judgments on behavior. Gender in Latin and Beyond: A Philologist's Take - Antigone

: In Latin grammar , nouns for females are typically part of the first declension (ending in -a ), while masculine nouns like puer often belong to the second declension.

: Used for a youth or young man, generally between the ages of 15 and 30. Grammar and Usage

: The standard word for "girl," though it is sometimes used poetically for a young woman. Boy : Puer : The primary word for "boy".

: When referring to a group containing both men and women, Latin typically defaults to the masculine plural form (e.g., pueri could refer to a group of boys or a mixed group of children). Literary Context