English edit

Noun edit

agendae

  1. (rare, proscribed, hypercorrect) plural of agenda
    • 1980, Your Daughters Shall Prophesy: Feminist Alternatives in Theological Education, Cornwall Collective:
      We participate in the Consortium Council, a body that recommends programs and policies for the collective member schools ; and we participate on an ad hoc basis in the agendae of other consortium entities.
    • 1982, Fritzie Reisner, Improving the Performance of the Public Sector: An Economic Approach to Program Design:
      In the last chapter we found the agendae of providers important, because they indicate the objective functions providers optimize, subject to constraints.
    • 1992, Liam Fahey, Winning in the New Europe: Taking Advantage of the Single Market:
      A persistent topic of discussion , evident both in the media and in the agendae of corporate executives and governmental civil servants, was the Internal Market, more commonly referred to as the “1992” Program []

Usage notes edit

  • This form is quite rare, and usually considered incorrect. The ordinary plural of agenda is simply agendas.

Latin edit

Participle edit

agendae

  1. inflection of agendus:
    1. nominative/vocative feminine plural
    2. genitive/dative feminine singular