VESTER, vester
Sounds Like: WES-ter
Translations: your, yours
From the root: VESTER
Part of Speech: Adjective
Explanation: This word is a possessive adjective meaning 'your' or 'yours', referring to something belonging to more than one person (the plural 'you'). It functions similarly to 'my' or 'our' but for the second person plural. Like other Latin adjectives, it changes its ending to agree in gender, number, and case with the noun it modifies.
Inflection: Nominative, Masculine, Singular (base form). It inflects for gender (masculine, feminine, neuter), number (singular, plural), and case (nominative, genitive, dative, accusative, ablative, vocative).
Instances
Polycarp of Smyrna
- Polycarp’s Letter to the Philippians — 12:3
From the same root
Below are all other words in our texts that we've cataloged as being from the same root, VESTER.
These could represent different words with related meanings, or different forms of the same word to fit different grammatical cases, numbers, or genders. This list may include spelling variants and even misspellings in the original manuscripts! Even more words from the same root may exist in other ancient texts that aren't in our database.
This concordance database is in beta
That means it's an unfinished preview of what we're building and is still being refined and corrected. It was initially generated from Google Gemini 2.5. It will be edited and corrected over time, with additional information added as we go.
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