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Puellae

Puellae is the plural nominative of the Latin noun puella, meaning "girls" or "young women." Puella is a first-declension feminine noun used for female children or young women, and it is the standard term for "girl" in classical Latin.

In the plural, the standard forms are: nominative puellae; genitive puellarum; dative puellis; accusative puellas; ablative

Puellae appears frequently in Latin texts to describe groups of girls or young women, and it can

Related terms include the singular puella and the masculine noun puer (plural pueri). Puellae serves as a

puellis;
and
vocative
puellae.
The
form
puellae
commonly
functions
as
both
the
nominative
plural
and
the
vocative
plural;
the
genitive
plural
is
puellarum.
refer
to
daughters,
female
servants,
or
young
women
in
general,
depending
on
context.
It
appears
in
poetry
and
prose
alike,
often
with
adjectives
or
other
modifiers
to
convey
social
status,
age,
or
appearance.
Example
sentences
include
phrases
such
as
Puellae
dormiunt
(The
girls
sleep)
or
Puellae
Romanae
(Roman
girls).
core
example
of
the
first-declension
feminine
paradigm
in
Latin
grammar
and
is
widely
encountered
in
Latin-language
learning
materials.
See
also
Puella
for
the
singular
form
and
Puellarum
for
the
genitive
plural.