Adjective declension is the pattern of endings a Latin adjective takes to show gender, number, and case. Adjectives fall into the first three declensions only, but they can modify nouns of any declension, agreeing in gender, number, and case rather than in matching endings.
Adjective declension is the system of endings that tells you an adjective's gender, number, and case. Latin adjectives come in two main families. First/second declension adjectives like magnus, magna, magnum use first declension endings for feminine forms and second declension endings for masculine and neuter. Third declension adjectives like fortis, forte or ingens use third declension endings for all genders. That's it. Adjectives occur in only the first three declensions, even though nouns go up to five.
Here's the part that trips people up. An adjective agrees with its noun in gender, number, and case, not in spelling. So magna manus (great hand) is perfectly correct even though magna looks first declension and manus is fourth. The endings don't have to rhyme; the grammar just has to match. This matters constantly in Vergil, where an adjective can sit several words away from its noun, and the only way to pair them is by decoding each ending. Adjectives can also stand alone as substantives, modifying an implied noun, so boni by itself can mean 'the good men.'
Adjective declension lives at the heart of Topic 5.1 in Unit 5 (Vergil's Aeneid), and it directly supports learning objective AP Latin 5.1.E, which asks you to describe how adjectives function in context and contribute to meaning. The CED spells out the essentials. Adjectives agree in gender, number, and case; they usually modify a stated noun but can work substantively; they exist only in the first three declensions but modify nouns in any declension; and their specific ending signals all three grammatical features.
In the Book 4 passages on Dido (lines 74-89 and 165-197), Vergil scatters adjectives far from their nouns for poetic effect. If you can't decline adjectives confidently, you can't reunite those pairs, and your translation (AP Latin 5.1.F) falls apart. Adjective endings also interact with meter (AP Latin 5.1.H), since a long or short final syllable can change how a line scans.
Keep studying AP Latin Unit SL2Apodi9BqlvQoqDkdk
Comparative Adjective (Unit 5)
Comparatives like fortior, fortius decline as third declension adjectives no matter what family the base adjective came from. So magnus (first/second declension) becomes maior and suddenly takes third declension endings.
Gerundive via Gerund (Unit 5)
The gerundive is an adjective built from a verb, and the CED notes it modifies a noun just like any other adjective. It declines like a first/second declension adjective and agrees with its noun in gender, number, and case, as in ad eas res conficiendas.
Ablative Absolute (Unit 5)
An ablative absolute often pairs a noun with an adjective or participle, both locked into the ablative case. Spotting the matching ablative endings is the fastest way to recognize the construction in a Vergil passage.
Accusative (Unit 5)
Case agreement means an adjective modifying an accusative noun must itself be accusative. In poetry, an accusative adjective early in the line is your warning that its noun is coming, sometimes many words later.
No released FRQ asks you to recite declension charts, but adjective declension is baked into almost everything the exam does ask. Multiple-choice questions on sight passages routinely ask which noun an adjective modifies, and the only way to answer is to read the adjective's gender, number, and case off its ending. On the translation FRQs, pairing each adjective with the right noun is non-negotiable for earning segment points, especially in Vergil, where word order separates pairs across the line. Short-answer questions can also ask you to identify the case and use of a given adjective or to explain a substantive use. The skill being tested is decoding, not memorizing. Given altae moenia Romae, you should see that altae is genitive singular feminine and belongs with Romae, not with neuter plural moenia.
Noun declension assigns each noun to one of five fixed families, and a noun never leaves its declension. Adjective declension only covers the first three declensions, and an adjective changes its ending to agree with whatever noun it modifies. The classic trap is assuming the noun and adjective must share a declension or matching endings. They don't. Omnis exercitus (third declension adjective, fourth declension noun) agrees perfectly in gender, number, and case even though the endings look nothing alike.
Latin adjectives decline in only the first three declensions, but they can modify nouns in any of the five declensions.
Adjectives agree with their nouns in gender, number, and case, not in matching endings, so magna manus is correct agreement.
An adjective's specific ending tells you its gender, number, and case, which is how you pair it with a noun that may sit far away in a line of Vergil.
Adjectives used substantively modify an implied noun, so a form like boni can mean 'the good men' all by itself.
Comparatives and gerundives are adjectives too, so they follow the same agreement rules. Comparatives decline like third declension adjectives, and gerundives like first/second.
On translation FRQs, mismatching an adjective with the wrong noun costs you segment points, so always confirm agreement before you commit.
It's the pattern of endings an adjective takes to show gender, number, and case. First/second declension adjectives like magnus, magna, magnum borrow first and second declension noun endings, while third declension adjectives like fortis use third declension endings for all genders.
No. Adjectives agree in gender, number, and case, not in declension. A third declension adjective can modify a fourth declension noun (omnis exercitus) and the agreement is still perfect even though the endings look different.
Nouns belong permanently to one of five declensions, while adjectives exist in only the first three and flex their endings to match any noun. A noun's gender is fixed; an adjective's gender changes depending on what it modifies.
Yes. That's called substantive use, where the adjective modifies an implied noun. The ending supplies the meaning, so boni means 'good men' and omnia means 'all things,' a move Vergil uses regularly in the Aeneid.
You won't be asked to write out a chart, but you need the endings cold to read at sight. MCQs ask which noun an adjective modifies, and translation FRQs in Unit 5 dock you for pairing adjectives with the wrong nouns, so the charts are the foundation even though they're never the question.