| 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 ... |
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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