zwei
Alemannic German
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Etymology
From Middle High German zwei, from Old High German zwei (neuter of zwēne), from Proto-Germanic *twai, from Proto-Indo-European *dwóh₁. Cognate with German zwei, Dutch twee, English two, Icelandic tveir.
Number
zwei
Central Franconian
Alternative forms
Etymology
From Old High German zwei (neuter of zwēne), from Proto-Germanic *twai, from Proto-Indo-European *dwóh₁.
Pronunciation
Numeral
zwei
- (most dialects) two
Descendants
- Hunsrik: zweu
German
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Cardinal : zwei Ordinal : zweite | ||
Alternative forms
Etymology
From Old High German zwei (neuter of zwēne), from Proto-Germanic *twai, from Proto-Indo-European *dwóh₁. Compare Dutch twee, English two, twain. In Old High German, and still today in some dialects, distinct forms are used for the three grammatical genders. Zwei is the originally neuter form, now used for all genders. The Old High German masculine zwēne is found back in early modern German zween; the feminine zwō lives on in the variant zwo (but now without any gender distinction).
Pronunciation
Numeral
zwei
- two (numerical value represented by the Arabic numeral 2; or describing a set with two components)
Declension
- Nominative and accusative are always uninflected.
- The genitive case takes the form zweier if no article or pronoun is preceding: Vater zweier Kinder – “a father of two children”. But: der Vater der zwei Kinder – “the father of the two children”. The form zweier is somewhat elevated; even in formal writing it is often more natural to avoid it (Vater von zwei Kindern).
- The dative case is uninflected in adjectival use: Ich sprach mit zwei Zeugen. – “I spoke with two witnesses.” When used as a noun, it may take the form zweien: Ich sprach mit zweien. – literally, “I spoke with two.” This rule is usually observed in formal standard German; but when a specification in the genitive case (or with von) is following, the bare form is more common: Ich sprach mit zwei der Zeugen. – “I spoke with two of the witnesses.” In colloquial German, zweien is never obligatory.
Synonyms
Coordinate terms
- 100: hundert, einhundert
- 103: tausend, eintausend
- 104: zehntausend (Myriade)
- 106: Million (tausendmaltausend, tausendtausend)
- 109: Milliarde
- 1012: Billion
- 1015: Billiarde
- 1018: Trillion
- 1021: Trilliarde
- 1024: Quadrillion
- 1027: Quadrilliarde
- 1030: Quintillion
- 1033: Quintilliarde
- 1036: Sextillion
- 1039: Sextilliarde
- 1042: Septillion
- 1045: Septilliarde
- 1048: Oktillion
- 1051: Oktilliarde
- 1054: Nonillion
- 1057: Nonilliarde
- 1060: Dezillion
- 1063: Dezilliarde
- 1066: Undezillion
- 1069: Undezilliarde
- 1072: Duodezillion
- 1075: Duodezilliarde
- 1078: Tredezillion
- 1081: Tredezilliarde
- 1084: Quattuordezillion
- 1087: Quattuordezilliarde
…
- 10100: Googol
…
- 10120: Vigintillion
- 10123: Vigintilliarde
…
Related terms
See also
Further reading
- “zwei” in Duden online
- Alemannic German terms inherited from Middle High German
- Alemannic German terms derived from Middle High German
- Alemannic German terms inherited from Old High German
- Alemannic German terms derived from Old High German
- Alemannic German terms inherited from Proto-Germanic
- Alemannic German terms derived from Proto-Germanic
- Alemannic German terms inherited from Proto-Indo-European
- Alemannic German terms derived from Proto-Indo-European
- Alemannic German lemmas
- Alemannic German numbers
- Alemannic German cardinal numbers
- Central Franconian terms inherited from Old High German
- Central Franconian terms derived from Old High German
- Central Franconian terms inherited from Proto-Germanic
- Central Franconian terms derived from Proto-Germanic
- Central Franconian terms inherited from Proto-Indo-European
- Central Franconian terms derived from Proto-Indo-European
- Central Franconian terms with IPA pronunciation
- Central Franconian lemmas
- Central Franconian numerals
- German terms inherited from Old High German
- German terms derived from Old High German
- German terms inherited from Proto-Germanic
- German terms derived from Proto-Germanic
- German terms inherited from Proto-Indo-European
- German terms derived from Proto-Indo-European
- German 1-syllable words
- German terms with IPA pronunciation
- German terms with audio links
- Rhymes:German/aɪ̯
- German lemmas
- German numerals
- German cardinal numbers