The Latin Legacy 327 Further simplifications followed The distinction between nominative and oblique case has disappeared in all modern Romance languages On Italian territory the oblique form of the plural disappeared Only the nominative survived (Latin mun (nom. pi)—Italian tnuri). In France, m Spam, and in Portugal the nominative plural disappeared. SINGULAR PLUHAL NOM OBL NOM OBL 1 lima (moon) lune (mo luna(s] ons) II caballu(s) (ho caballu rse) cdbalh (hor caballo(s) ses) III cam(s) (di cane 3g) cane(s) (dogs) and the oblique (originally accusative) form with a final 5 took us place (Latin ace pi muros—French murs) Case distinction died last in Gaul In the oldest French and Provenjal texts some nouns still preserve the distinction between a subject and an object case as the following table shows' SINGULAR PLURAL NOM. OBL NOM OBL Vulgar Latin munt* muru mun r/'vros Old French Modern French murs mur mur murs mur murs The case-marks of the adjective shared the same fate as those of the noun Meanwhile separate neuter forms disappeared There were two reasons why the noun-form came nearer to that of the adjective. One is the disappearance of two families of noun-behaviour owing to the absorption of the fourth and fifth declensions (p 317) so that the characteristic affixes corresponded to those of one or other remaining f amihes of nouns The other was regulanzation of the gender-classes