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  2. Ordinal numeral - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ordinal_numeral

    However, in modern interpretations of English grammar, ordinal numerals are usually conflated with adjectives. Ordinal numbers may be written in English with numerals and letter suffixes: 1st, 2nd or 2d, 3rd or 3d, 4th, 11th, 21st, 101st, 477th, etc., with the suffix acting as an ordinal indicator. Written dates often omit the suffix, although ...

  3. Numeral prefix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Numeral_prefix

    The same suffix may be used with more than one category of number, as for example the orginary numbers secondary and tertiary and the distributive numbers binary and ternary. For the hundreds, there are competing forms: Those in -gent- , from the original Latin, and those in -cent- , derived from centi- , etc. plus the prefixes for 1 through 9 .

  4. Ordinal indicator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ordinal_indicator

    In written languages, an ordinal indicator is a character, or group of characters, following a numeral denoting that it is an ordinal number, rather than a cardinal number. Historically these letters were "elevated terminals", that is to say the last few letters of the full word denoting the ordinal form of the number displayed as a superscript .

  5. English numerals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_numerals

    Numbers used to denote the denominator of a fraction are known linguistically as "partitive numerals". In spoken English, ordinal numerals and partitive numerals are identical with a few exceptions. Thus "fifth" can mean the element between fourth and sixth, or the fraction created by dividing the unit into five pieces.

  6. Template:Ordinal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:Ordinal

    To display -d for the ordinal suffix rather than -nd and -rd, use {{ordinal | integer | d}}. This template should not be used in running prose in articles; it is intended for automated script processing of numeric data. Writing something like "in the {{ordinal|16}} century" serves no purpose, and just makes the wikicode harder to understand and ...

  7. Multiplier (linguistics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiplier_(linguistics)

    In English native multipliers exist, formed by the suffix -fold, as in onefold, twofold, threefold. However, these have largely been replaced by single, double, and triple, which are of Latin origin, via French. They have a corresponding distributive number formed by suffixing -y (reduction of Middle English -lely > -ly), as in singly.

  8. Distributive numeral - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distributive_numeral

    While the cardinal number is 'centum', the distributive form is "centēnī,-ae, a". In Japanese numerals, distributive forms are formed regularly from a cardinal number, a counter word, and the suffix -zutsu (ずつ), as in hitori-zutsu (一人ずつ, one person at a time, one person each).

  9. Module:I18n/ordinal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Module:I18n/ordinal

    Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... {Ordinal}} template used "eo" number formatting for "br" ordinals ... (using European digits for all numbers ...