цетꙑри на десѧте
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Old Novgorodian
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Inherited from Proto-Slavic *četyre na desęte. Cognate with Old East Slavic четꙑрьнадесѧть (četyrĭnadesętĭ), Old Ruthenian чотырна́дцать (čotyrnádcatʹ) and Russian четы́рнадцать (četýrnadcatʹ).
Numeral
[edit]цетꙑри на десѧте (cetyri na desęte)
- fourteen (14)
Related terms
[edit]- цетвьрге m (cetvĭrge, “Thursday”)
- цетвьрте (cetvĭrte, “fourth”)
- цетвьртина f (cetvĭrtina, “quarter”)
- цетвьртъка f (cetvĭrtŭka, “quarter”)
- цетвьрть f (cetvĭrtĭ, “quarter”)
- цетвьртьне (cetvĭrtĭne, “fourth”)
- цетꙑри (cetyri, “four”)
- цетꙑри десѧте (cetyri desęte, “forty”)
- цетꙑри съта (cetyri sŭta, “four hundred”)
Further reading
[edit]- “чьтꙑри на дьс[ѧ]… (letter no. 1018), c. 1240‒1260”, in Древнерусские берестяные грамоты [Birchbark Literacy from Medieval Rus] (in Russian), http://gramoty.ru, 2007–2024
Categories:
- Old Novgorodian terms inherited from Proto-Slavic
- Old Novgorodian terms derived from Proto-Slavic
- Old Novgorodian terms derived from Proto-Balto-Slavic
- Old Novgorodian terms derived from Proto-Indo-European
- Old Novgorodian lemmas
- Old Novgorodian numerals
- Old Novgorodian multiword terms
- Old Novgorodian terms with quotations