Vulnerantur
Vulnerantur is a Latin verb form meaning “they are wounded” or “they are being wounded.” It is the present passive indicative, third person plural, of vulnerare, a first-conjugation verb meaning “to wound.” The corresponding active form is vulnerant (“they wound”). The infinitive is vulnerari (“to be wounded”), and the perfect passive participle is vulneratus, -a, -um (“wounded”). The noun vulnus, vulneris, from which the verb derives, refers to a wound or injury.
Morphology and usage: In Latin, vulnerable or wounded subjects take the passive endings, so vulnerantur aligns
Examples: Milites vulnerantur ab inimicis. Translation: The soldiers are wounded by the enemies. In proelio multi
Related forms: Vulneror (I am wounded), vulneraris (you are wounded), vulneratur (he/she/it is wounded) in the singular,
Summary: Vulnerantur is a standard Latin passive form used to describe people or things that suffer wounds,