[patched] | Puellulas

puellulas

In Latin, is the accusative plural form of the noun puellula , which translates to "little girls" or "young lasses." This term is a diminutive of puella (girl) and is used to convey a sense of endearment, smallness, or youth. Linguistic Breakdown

Puellula is the nominative singular form—the "dictionary" form. From there, we decline it like any other first-declension noun: puellulas

-ul-

Before we chase its poetry, we must understand its architecture. Latin builds meaning through suffixes, and the diminutive suffix (or -cul- ) is the tool of choice. puellulas In Latin, is the accusative plural form

puellulas

They didn't curse the well. They didn't become mice. Instead, they sat on the cold stones and named every star until their mothers' voices—sharp as broken pottery—called them home. And for one Roman night, the owned the sky. Declension: First (stem: puellulā- ) Gender: Feminine Case:

  1. puella

    At its heart, puellulas is a form of the Latin noun , meaning "girl." The suffix -ula is a diminutive, so puellula means "little girl" (often with a connotation of youth, smallness, or affection). Adding the accusative plural ending -s results in puellulas , which translates to "the little girls" as the direct object of a sentence.

  2. Example (concise worldbuilding):