3. numerals Kobrina адапт
3. numerals Kobrina адапт
3. numerals Kobrina адапт
§ 228. The numeral denotes an abstract number or the order of thing in succession.
In accordance with this distinction the numerals fall into two groups cardinal numerals
(cardinals) and ordinal numerals (ordinals).
Cardinals Ordinals
0 nought, zero
1 one 1st first
2 two 2nd second
3 three 3rd third
4 four 4th fourth
5 five 5th fifth
6 six 6th sixth
7 seven 7th seventh
8 eight 8th eighth
9 nine 9th ninth
10 ten 10th tenth
11 eleven 11th eleventh
12 twelve 12th twelfth
13 thirteen 13th thirteenth
14 fourteen 14th fourteenth
15 fifteen 15th fifteenth
16 sixteen 16th sixteenth
17 seventeen 17th seventeenth
18 eighteen 18th eighteenth
19 nineteen 19th nineteenth
20 twenty 20th twentieth
21 twenty-one, etc. 21st twenty-first, etc.
30 thirty 30th thirtieth
40 forty 40th fortieth
50 fifty 50th fiftieth
60 sixty 60th sixtieth
70 seventy 70th seventieth
80 eighty 80th eightieth
90 ninety 90th ninetieth
100 one (a) hundred 100th (one) hundredth
101 one (a) hundred and one, etc. 101st (one) hundred and first, etc.
1,000 one (a) thousand 1,000th (one) thousandth
1,001 one (a) thousand and one, etc. 1,001st one thousand and first, etc.
100,000 one hundred thousand 100,000th (one) hundred thousandth
1.00.0 one million 1,000,000th (one) millionth
1.000.001 one million and one, etc. 1,000,001st (one) million and first, etc.
Morphological composition
The Cardinals
§ 229. Among the cardinals there are simple, derived, and compound words.
The cardinals from one to twelve, hundred, thousand, million are simple words; those from
thirteen to nineteen are derived from the corresponding simple ones by means of the suffix -teen;
the cardinals denoting fens are derived from the corresponding simple ones by means of the suffix
-ty.
Note:
Mind the difference in the spelling of the stem in three and thirteen (thirty), four and forty, five
and fifteen (fifty).
The cardinals from twenty-one to twenty-nine, from thirty-one to thirty-nine, etc. and those over
hundred are compounds.
In cardinals consisting of tens and units the two words are hyphenated:
In cardinals including hundreds and thousands the words denoting units and tens are joined to
those denoting hundreds, thousands, by means of the conjunction and:
Note:
If not part of a composite numeral the words hundred, thousand and million in the singular are
always used with the indefinite article; a hundred pages, a thousand ways; in composite numerals
both a and one are possible, but one is less common; a (one) hundred and fifty pages.
The words for common fractions are also composite. They are formed from cardinals denoting
the numerator and substantivized ordinals denoting the denominator. If the numerator is a numeral
higher than one, the ordinal in the denominator takes the plural form. The numerator and
denominator may be joined by means of a hyphen or without it:
In mixed numbers the numerals denoting fractions are joined to the numerals denoting integers
(whole numbers) by means of the conjunction and:
In decimal fractions the numerals denoting fractions are joined to those denoting whole
numbers by means of the words point or decimal:
The ordinals
§ 230. Among the ordinals there are also simple, derivative and compound words.
The simple ordinals are first, second and third.
The derivative ordinals are derived from the simple and derivative cardinals by means of the
suffix -th:
Mind the difference in the spelling of the stems in the following cardinals and ordinals:
five-fifth, nine-ninth.
The compound ordinals are formed from composite cardinals. In this case only the last
component of the compound numeral has the form of the ordinal:
Morphological characteristics
§ 231. Numerals do not undergo any morphological changes, that is, they do not have
morphological categories. In this they differ from nouns with numerical meaning. Thus the
numerals ten (десять), hundred (сто), thousand (тысяча) do not have plural forms:
whereas the corresponding homonymous nouns ten (десяток), hundred (сотня), thousand
(тысяча) do:
Patterns of combinability
§ 232. Numerals combine mostly with nouns and function as their attributes, usually as
premodifying attributes. If a noun has several premodifying attributes including a cardinal or an
ordinal, these come first, as in:
three tiny green leaves, seven iron men, the second pale little boy, etc.
The only exception is pronoun determiners, which always begin a series of attributes:
the first three tall girls, the second two grey dogs, etc.
When used with the indefinite article, they lose their numerical meaning and acquire that of a
pronoun (another, one more), as in:
Postmodifying numerals combine with a limited number of nouns. Postmodifying cardinals are
combinable with some nouns denoting items of certain sets of things:
pages, paragraphs, chapters, parts of books, acts and scenes of plays, lessons in textbooks,
apartments
and rooms, buses or trams (means of transport), grammatical terms, etc.;
room two hundred and three, page ten, bus four, participle one, etc.
Note:
In such cases the cardinals have a numbering meaning and thus differ semantically from the
ordinals which have an enumerating meaning. Enumeration indicates the order of a thing in a
certain succession of things, while numbering indicates a number constantly attached to a thing
either in a certain succession or in a certain set of things. Thus, the first room (enumeration) is not
necessarily room one (numbering), etc. Compare:
the first room I looked into was room five,
or
the second page that he read was page twenty-three, etc.
Postmodifying ordinals occur in combinations with certain proper names, mostly those
denoting the members of well-known dynasties:
Mind the position of the article in such phrases. It is always attached to the numeral.
When used as substitutes numerals combine with various verbs:
1) prepositional phrases:
the first of May, one of the men, two of them, etc.
2) pronouns:
every three days, all seven, each fifth, etc.
3) adjectives:
the best three of them, the last two weeks, etc.
4) particles:
just five days ago, only two, only three books, he is nearly sixty, etc.
Note:
When they have the function of subject or predicative the numerals are combinable with link
verbs, generally the verb to be:
Syntactic function
§ 233. Though cardinals and ordinals have mainly similar syntactic functions they differ in
certain details.
The most characteristic function of both is that of premodifying attribute:
In this connection it must be remembered that while the ordinals are used as ordinary attributes,
cardinals with the function of an attribute govern the number of the noun they modify:
Note 1:
Quite unlike Ukrainian, composite cardinals ending in one (twenty-one, thirty-one, two hundred
and one, three hundred and twenty-one, etc.) require a plural noun:
twenty-one pages, two hundred and one pages.
Note 2:
In numbering the items of certain sets of things cardinals, not ordinals, are used to modify the
nouns denoting these things. The cardinals thus used are always postmodifying. The nouns
modified do not take an article:
page three, lesson one, room thirty-five, etc.
Both cardinals and ordinals may have the functions of subject, object, predicative and
adverbial modifier of time:
However, in all these cases a noun is always implied, that is, the numeral functions as a
substitute for the noun either mentioned in the previous context, or self-evident from the situation.
The only case in which the numerals (cardinals) can really have the function of subject, object or
predicative is when they are used with their purely abstract force:
Substantivized numerals
§ 234. Numerals can be substantivized, that is, take formal nominal features: the plural suffix -
s, an article, and the ability to combine with adjectives and some other modifiers of nouns. When
numerals undergo substantivization not only their morphology is changed, but also their meaning.
Thus when the numerals hundred, thousand and million are substantivized they acquire the
meaning "a great quantity", as in:
1) school marks
(He got a two. He got three fives)
or
school marks in Great Britain
(He got ten. He got three nines last week).
3) playing cards:
the two of hearts, the five of spades, the seven of diamonds, the ten of clubs, three of trumps.
5) decades:
in the early sixties, in the late fifties, etc.
The meaning of substantivized ordinals is less affected by substantivization and remains the
same: