女人补铁有什么好处
Tagged with morphology numbers
7 questions
6
votes
1
answer
499
views
Is unius an irregular genitive?
I notice that the genitive of unus can apparently be either the regular uni, or can also be unius.
Is this form, unius, just a completely irregular oddity, or is there some logical precedent for it? ...
5
votes
1
answer
413
views
Why aren't cardinal numbers over three inflected?
I've been looking through some etymologies and it seems to me that cardinals past trēs aren't inflected. Is this correct, and if so, what's the logic in forming words with indeclinable numbers? Take, ...
4
votes
1
answer
207
views
Quinquies and quinquiens
Consider the word quinquies/quinquiens ("five times").
It has two alternative spellings.
Having the options -ies and -iens seems to be common for numerals of this kind.
What is the origin of these ...
6
votes
2
answers
420
views
Comparing decem and -decim
The Latin cardinal numbers starting at ten are decem, undecim, duodecim…
Does the -decim (roughly "-teen") come from decem or from the same root?
(I faintly recall decem and δ?κα coming from ...
6
votes
1
answer
162
views
The middle A of quadraginta
Consider these Latin cardinal numbers:
quadrAginta,
quinquAginta,
sexAginta,
nonAginta.
The -ginta seems to stand for tens (cf. triginta, octoginta) and the initial parts quadr-, quinqu-, sex-, and ...