Well, shouldn’t it be “argumentum ad savannam africanam”, if the adjective refers to the savanna (which is feminine singular accusative), or eventually “africanum”, if it binds to the argumentum (which is neuter singular nominative)?
I supposed so, but wanted to cover even the less probable alternative in a single comment. (Which purpose is now defeated by the need to write this second comment.)
Well, I thought Kawoomba knew it better than me, and it would be a u-declination (africanus, -u). But no, according to the English Wictionary entry on africanus, it is a/o. So, africanam. Though the last time when I was learning latin was eight years ago, so...
I am not a Latin specialist, so I have to rely on Wikipedia in this, but it seems that u-declension is a category for nouns, not adjectives, which seem to never have -u- in feminine accusative singular ending; also, even a u-noun would have -um, not -us, in singular accusative.
Well, shouldn’t it be “argumentum ad savannam africanam”, if the adjective refers to the savanna (which is feminine singular accusative), or eventually “africanum”, if it binds to the argumentum (which is neuter singular nominative)?
I can’t be the only one thinking “people called Romanes, they go the house?”
It’s the ((African savanna) argument), an argument from the African savanna; not the (African (savanna argument)), an African argument about savannas.
I supposed so, but wanted to cover even the less probable alternative in a single comment. (Which purpose is now defeated by the need to write this second comment.)
Well, I thought Kawoomba knew it better than me, and it would be a u-declination (africanus, -u). But no, according to the English Wictionary entry on africanus, it is a/o. So, africanam. Though the last time when I was learning latin was eight years ago, so...
(edit) When we are at it, what’s it in Lojban?
I am not a Latin specialist, so I have to rely on Wikipedia in this, but it seems that u-declension is a category for nouns, not adjectives, which seem to never have -u- in feminine accusative singular ending; also, even a u-noun would have -um, not -us, in singular accusative.
I have no idea about Lojban.