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Sean McGrath wrote: > At 16:43 29/06/2001 +0800, Rick Jelliffe wrote: > >Is there any word in English which uses the -ta plural (apart from in Rap)? > > desiderata plural of desideratum. > > Sean Every neuter plural in Greek and Latin (find me an exception!) ends in -a. Therefore it is very easy to take a perfect passive participle where the stem happens to end in 't'-- from any of any of thousands of verbs, as Sean has done with the verb 'to desire'--and create a neuter plural participle 'the things that have been desired'. Compare erratum/errata, formed in precisely the same way. This is rather different from a class of neuter nouns in Greek which follow the schema/schemata pattern between the nominative singular and plural forms. Besides stigma/stigmata this group includes chroma/chromata for color and sema/semata for 'sign' or 'symbol', the root of 'semantics', 'sememics', etc. Respectfully, Walter Perry
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