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Citations:numeral

    From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

    English citations ofnumeral

    Noun :word or symbol representing a number

    [edit]
    1695 16981736 1756 17941812 1862 18751937 1942 1946 1948 1962 19852002 2005
    ME «15th c.16th c.17th c.18th c.19th c.20th c.21st c.
    • 1695, Basil Kennett,Romae Antiquae Notitia: or The Antiquities of Rome, part I, page 367-368
      Laſtly, if the AdverbNumeral be join'd, it denotes ſo many Hundred Thouſand, asDecies Seſtertium ſignifies Ten Hundred ThouſandSeſtertii; or if theNumeral Adverb be put by it ſelf, the Signification is the ſame,Decies orVigeſies ſtand for ſo many Hundred ThouſandSeſtertii, or as they ſay, ſo many HundredSeſtertia.
    • 1698, Walter Cross,The Taghmical Art: or, The art of expounding scripture by the points, apge 32
      On that day the Lord ſhall be one, and his Name One, ſays he,One is to be referred toKing, notLord; for a Proper Name cannot admit of aNumeral without Æquivocation; We ſay not, oneThomas orJohn.
    • 1736, Ferdinando Altieri,A New Italian Grammar, page 88
      Uno being uſed as aNumeral, has no Plural; but diſtributively taken, it aſſumes the Plural;
    • 1756, J. B. Ozinde,The Theory and Practice of the French Tongue, page 175
      Obſerve thatil is placed before neuter verbs, (which then become imperſonal,) though follow'd by another nominative, when this laſt is uſed in anumeral or indefinite ſenſe;
    • 1794, Abel Boyer,The Complete French Master, 2nd edition, page 224
      Sometimes there goes an adverb betwixt the article and the noun adjective, ornumeral; as,Son bien monte à environ dix mille livres Sterling,[]
    • 1812, Alexander Crombie,Gymnasium sive Symbola Critica, volume 1, page 163
      The Latins never used this phraseology, unless withunus, which they frequently joined with an ordinal numeral. Thus, "twenty-third," isvigesimus tertius: "twenty-first,"vigesimus primus, sometimesunus, et vigesimus. The latter, or lastnumeral in English, will direct the learner to the proper expression.
    • 1862, Robert Gordon Latham,The English Language, page 595
      Thenumeralone is naturally singular. All the rest are naturally plural.
    • 1875, Robert Caldwell,A Comparative Grammar of the Dravidian or South-Indian Family of Languages, page 232
      The primitive radical form of the Dravidiannumeral five is, as we have seen,ei orê, as appears from its use as anumeral adjective.
    • 1937, E. E. Wardale,An Introduction to Middle English, page 85
      O.E.hund andþūsend, which had been nouns governing a genitive, came in M.E. to be used asnumeral adjectives, andhund gradually died out, being replaced by the rival formhundred, from Old Norse.
    • 1942, Samuel Moore & Thomas A. Knott,The Elements of Old English, page 165
      ān,one, which is sometimes anumeral and sometimes an adjective, is declined with the endings of the strong declension of the adjective[]
    • 1946, R. Priebsch & W. E. Collinson,The German Language, page 210
      The wordein in Middle High German combines the functions of anumeral, indefinite pronominal and indefinite article.
    • 1948, Maria de Lourdes sá Pereira,Brazilian Portuguese: Grammar, page 59
      Thesenumerals are invariable with the exception ofum anddois, which have the feminine forms given above.
    • 1962, Elie Cristo-Loveanu,The Romanian Language, page 87
      All Romaniannumerals are derived from Latin.Suta, however, is considered Slavic, although some scholars believe that it derives from Latincenta <centum[]
    • 1984, Nicholas Maltzoff,Essentials of Russian Grammar, page 127
      In the oblique cases thenumeral and the noun always agree.[]Thesenumerals—considered grammatically as nouns—are followed by the genitive plural of nouns in all six cases:
    • 1985, Peter Baláž, Miloslav Darovec, & Heather Trebatická,Slovak for Slavicists, page 137
      When thenumeral tisíc "a thousand" is connected with a noun it is either not declined, or it is declined like thenumeral päť, piati[]
    • 2002 — Laurie Bauer & Rodney Huddleston, "Lexical word-formation", p1621-1722 inThe Cambridge Grammar of the English Language, p1715
      We use the termnumeral for linguistic expressions andnumber for meanings. For example,five is a numeral expressing the number "5" - andfifteen hundred andone thousand five hundred are different numerals expressing the same number, "1,500".
    • 2005, Frederic M. Wheelock,Wheelock's Latin, 6th edition, page 103
      Latin has other types ofnumerals, besides the cardinals and ordinals[] There were also "distributive"numerals,singulī, -ae, -a (one each)[]
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