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  1. Sep 30, 2019 · As adjectives, the main distinction is that senex is said of a person, while senilis is said of things belonging or relative to such a person. A simple example could be senex vir seniles cogitationes cogitat , an old man has senile thoughts/the thoughts of an old man/thoughts typical of their age.

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  3. 3 days ago · senex (genitive senis, comparative senior); third-declension one-termination adjective (non-i-stem) (usually of a person) old, aged, elderly. Synonyms: grandaevus, senectus, vetus, vetulus, vetustus. Antonyms: iuvenis, novus, novellus, recēns.

  4. Many adjectives, from their signification, can be used only in the masculine and feminine. These may be called adjectives of common gender. adulēscēns youthful [† dēses], -idis slothful inops, -opis poor sōspe, -itis safe. Similarly, senex (old man) and iuvenis (young man) are sometimes called masculine adjectives.

  5. Declension of senex, declension tables of many Latin adjectives, comparison, all cases.

  6. Adjective. senex ( third-declension) ( usually, of a person) old, aged. Vulgate. Heli autem erat senex valde et audivit omnia quae faciebant filii sui universo Israheli. Now Eli was very old, and heard all that his sons did unto all Israel;

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  7. 1. old, aged; old man. English derivatives: senate senator senescent senile senior seniority sir sire. Oxford Latin Dictionary. Noun. 1. An old man. (b) familiarly, in comedy, of a pater familias) the amster, 'the old man'.

  8. senex (old man) = blue (masculine), single (one), and Norman the lion (nominative). It also comes from the 3rd Family. If we want to describe senex in Latin, we must use a blue, single, lion adjective. ♦ Let’s say we want to say that the senex is good . o bonus, bona, bonum = good. This adjective is a 1 st /2 nd adjective, so

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