plēbēsf (variously declined, genitiveplēbeīorplēbīorplēbis); fifth declension, third declension
Alternative form of plēbs
106 BCE – 43 BCE, Cicero, De Lege Agraria 2.66.10:
Habes tantam pecuniam qua hosce omnis agros et ceteros horum similis non modo emere verum etiam coacervare possis; cur eos non definis neque nominas, ut saltem deliberare plebes Romana possit quid intersit sua, quid expediat, quantum tibi in emendis et in vendendis rebus committendum putet?
1930 translation by John Henry Freese
Your wealth is so great that you can not only buy these lands and others like them, but heap them all together; why do you not limit them and give their names, that the Roman people may at least be able to consider what its interest is, what is to its advantage, how much confidence it thinks ought to be given to you in the purchase and sale of things?
27 BCE – 25 BCE, Titus Livius, Ab Urbe Condita2.21.6: