[ˈwiː.waːks], [ˈviː.vaks]
OriginFrom vīvō (“to live, to be alive”) + -āx (“inclined to”).
- declension-3, one-terminationTenacious of life, long-lived, vivacious; venerable.
- declension-3, one-terminationLong-lasting, enduring, durable.
- declension-3, one-terminationLively, vigorous, vivacious, energetic.
Formsvīvāx(canonical) · vīvācis(genitive) · vīvāciter(adverb) · vīvāx(feminine, masculine, neuter, nominative, singular) · vīvācēs(feminine, masculine, nominative, plural) · vīvācia(neuter, nominative, plural) · vīvācis(feminine, genitive, masculine, neuter, singular) · vīvācium(feminine, genitive, masculine, neuter, plural) · vīvācī(dative, feminine, masculine, neuter, singular) · vīvācibus(dative, feminine, masculine, neuter, plural) · vīvācem(accusative, feminine, masculine, singular) · vīvāx(accusative, neuter, singular) · vīvācīs(accusative, feminine, masculine, plural) · vīvācēs(accusative, feminine, masculine, plural) · vīvācia(accusative, neuter, plural) · vīvācī(ablative, feminine, masculine, singular) · vīvāce(ablative, feminine, masculine, singular) · vīvācī(ablative, neuter, singular) · vīvācibus(ablative, feminine, masculine, neuter, plural) · vīvāx(feminine, masculine, neuter, singular, vocative)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0