old irish numbers - Axtarish в Google
Numbers in Old Irish
Cardinal
Ordinal
1
óen [oːi̯n]
cétnae [ˈkʲeːdn͈e]
2
dá [daː]
tánaise [ˈtaːnisʲe]
3
trí [tʲrʲiː]
tris [ˈtʲrʲis]
4
cethair [ˈkʲeθirʲ]
cethramad [ˈkʲeθraṽað]
Old Irish terms that represent or relate to numbers of various kinds. Category:Old Irish cardinal numbers: Old Irish terms that are used to count objects.
Celtic Numerals. | Balto-Slavic | Celtic | Germanic | Hellenic | Indo ... Old Gaulish. Old Welsh. Old Cumbric. Old Irish. 1. oinos. oino. oino. oino. un. un ... Brythonic (British) · Irish Gaelic
Early forms of Irish/Gaelic ; 1, oinas, oen ; 2, dau, dá ; 3, tris, trí ; 4, kwetur, cethair ...
Old Irish terms that quantify nouns. Category:Old Irish numeral forms: Old Irish numerals that are inflected to display grammatical relations other than the ...
It was used from c. ... 600 to c. ... 900. The main contemporary texts are dated c. ... 700–850; by 900 the language had already transitioned into early Middle Irish.
Numbers like, 75, 63, 28 or 46 and so on. You say the ten, and then add the unit. Example: Number = 67. Sixty = seasca Seven = seacht, so 67 in Irish = Seasca ...
In everyday modern Irish, the phrase Corr Uimhir signifies 'odd number', i.e. 3, 5, 7 etc. However, one could consider if the phrase originally meant 'Crane ...
The new-old numerals or Why this sucks ; 60, 70, 80, 90, 100 ; sesca (gen. sescot), sechtmogo (gen. sechtmogat), ochtmoga (gen. ochtmugat), nócha (gen. nóchat) ...
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