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The phrase axis mundi is used frequently in archaeology and art history to describe certain places as a "world center" or "center of the universe" in Indigenous or ancient/historical thought. How would this phrase be correctly pluralized? For instance, "By the early first millennium BCE, new urban centers developed across the region and were conceptualized as axes(?) mundi(?)." Any insight would be useful!

Glorfindel
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Sarah
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    Is the axis mundi the center of the world, or is it that which everything else revolves around? – RonJohn Jul 24 '21 at 13:00
  • @RonJohn That'd make a nice separate question! The exact meaning of the phrase and also axis in itself is worth exploring properly. – Joonas Ilmavirta Jul 25 '21 at 15:24

1 Answers1

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Yes, the nominative plural of axis is axes.

Mundi 'of the world' is the genitive singular of mundus 'world', and you probably wouldn't pluralize it in most contexts (presumably there's still only one world), but should it become necessary to do so, the genitive plural is mundorum 'of the worlds'.

Axes mundi reads correctly to me, for your purposes.

Cairnarvon
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