ácer, ácris, ácre, keen, STEM ácri- | SINGULAR | PLURAL | |||||
NOM. | ácer | ácris | ácre | ácrés | ácrés | ácria | |
GEN. | ácris | ácris | ácris | ácrium | ácrium | ácrium | |
DAT. | ácrí | ácrí | ácrí | ácribus | ácribus | ácribus | |
ACC. | ácrem | ácrem | ácre | ácrís (-és) | ácrís (-és) | ácria | |
ABL. | ácrí | ácrí | ácrí | ácribus | ácribus | ácribus |
a. Like ácer are declined the following stems in ri-: -
NOTE 1: This formation is comparatively late, and hence, in the poets and in early Latin, either the masculine or the feminine form of these adjectives was sometime used for both genders: as, coetus alacris (Enn.). In others, as faenebris, fúnebris, illús tris, lúgubris, mediocris, muliebris, there is no separate masculine form at all, and these are declined like levis (§ 116).
NOTE 2: Celer, celeris, celere, swift, has the genitive plural celerum, used only as noun, denoting a military rank. The proper name Celer has the ablative in -e.