Latin for YOU WILL BE = Whoop De Do
Sum.
"You are" would be "es", if it is singular, or "estis", if it is plural.
Short answer: habeōLonger answer: Latin present tense verbs irrevocably express person, i.e. who is doing the action. The 'ō' expresses the first person in the singular, thus 'habeō' properly means 'Ihave.' The infinitive form, which would traslate as 'tohave,' is habēre.
In Latin est is singular. est plural is sunt
expressa
Gladius means "Sword" in Latin. This is 2nd declension nominative singular. If it was to be used in the Pleural the word used would be Gladii.
Gaudeo is the word for rejoice in Latin, but if you want to command someone to rejoice it would be either gaude for singular or gaudete for plural.
of Rome, as in senators of Rome, would be Romae. But "Roman," such as Roman citizen, would be Romanus/Romana.
The first singular declension of "habet" in Latin is "habeo." This form is used to indicate that "I have" something.
His writing influenced literature throughout the eighteenth centuryHe was the leading writer of latin prose
The word fungi is a plural noun.The singular noun is fungus.This is a Latin plural more commonly used than the English plural which would be funguses.