admirati
Admirati is primarily encountered as a Latin form rather than a widely recognized modern term. In classical Latin, admirati is the masculine plural nominative or accusative of the perfect passive participle admiratus, from the deponent verb admiror (to admire). As a participial form used as a noun, admirati can mean “the admired” or “those who admired,” depending on grammatical role and context. It often appears in inscriptions and narrative passages where participles are nominalized.
In Italian, the corresponding standard forms are ammiri-ato, ammiri-ta, ammira-ti, or ammira-te (singular and plural, masculine
In English-language scholarship, admirati is usually treated as a Latin word. It is translated according to
Etymology and related forms: admirati derives from the Latin verb admiror, with the participle admiratus (masculine)