aberrans
Latin
Etymology
Present active participle of aberrō (“wander, stray from”).
Participle
aberrāns m, f, and n (genitive aberrantis); third declension
- wandering, straying or deviating from
- aberring, going astray; deviating, digressing
- seeking distraction
- (by extension) making a mistake, erring
Inflection
| Number | Singular | Plural | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Case \ Gender | M.F. | N. | MM.FF. | NN. | |
| nominative | aberrāns | aberrāns | aberrantēs | aberrantia | |
| genitive | aberrantis | aberrantis | aberrantium | aberrantium | |
| dative | aberrantī | aberrantī | aberrantibus | aberrantibus | |
| accusative | aberrantem | aberrāns | aberrantēs | aberrantia | |
| ablative | aberrante1 | aberrante1 | aberrantibus | aberrantibus | |
| vocative | aberrāns | aberrāns | aberrantēs | aberrantia | |
1 But aberrantī when used purely as an adjective.