Slovene numerals

Slovene numerals

=Cardinal numerals=

Numbers such as ena, dve, tri, štiri, pet (one, two, three, four, five) are used to express amount. For example, "po pošti smo vam poslali tri pakete" ("We posted three packages to you"), "ko dopolniš sedemindvajseto leto, dobiš denar ("when you reach your twenty-seventh year, you will get the money"), and "ekvator je dolg okrog štirideset tisoč sedemdeset kilometrov" ("the equator is about forty thousand and seventy kilometres long").

The numbers up to ten are as follows: nič (0), ena, dve (or dva), tri, štiri, pet, šest, sedem, osem, devet, deset.

From 10 to 20, numbers are suffixed by "-najst" ("-teen", from old Slovenian "-nadeset"): enajst, dvanajst, trinajst, štirinajst, petnajst, šestnajst, sedemnajst, osemnajst, devetnajst (eleven, twelve, thirteen, fourteen, fifteen, sixteen, nineteen).

From 20 to 100, the unit comes first, then the ten, joined together by "in" (and), much like in German. For tens, they are unit numbers appended by "deset" (ten), except for 20, which is "dvajset".
* dvajset (20), enaindvajset (21), dvaindvajset (22), triindvajset (23), štiriindvajset (24) ... trideset (30), enaintrideset (31) ... petdeset (50) ... devetindevetdeset (99).

Hundreds are formed with the word "sto", similar to tens.
* sto (100), sto ena (101), sto dve (102) ... sto deset (110) ... sto devetindevetdeset (199), dvesto (200) ... tristo (300) ... devetsto devetindevetdeset (999)

Thousands follow the same style, but are separated by spaces.
* tisoč (1000), tisoč ena (1001) ... tisoč sto (1100) ... dva tisoč (2000) ... pet tisoč petsto petinpetdeset (5555) ... deset tisoč (10,000) ... sto tisoč (100,000) ... devetsto devetindevetdeset tisoč devetsto devetindevetdeset (999,999).

Millions and further on (milliards, billions, billiards, trillions, trilliards ...) are declined.
* milijon (1,000,000) ... dva milijona (2 million), dva milijona ena (2,000,001) ... sedem milijonov petnajst tisoč sedemindvajset (7,015,027) ... devetsto devetindevetdeset milijonov devetsto devetindevetdeset tisoč devetsto devetindevetdeset (999,999,999), milijarda (1,000,000,000) ... dve milijardi (2,000,000,000) ... bilijon (1,000,000,000,000) ...

Ordinal numerals

Prvi, drugi, tretji, četrti, peti (first, second, third, fourth, fifth) are; used to express the position in a numbered order (when written with a number, the number is followed by a full-stop (1. (1st)). For example, "zasedli so prvo mesto" ("they took first place"), "stoprvi gost je prispel" ("the hundred and first guest has arrived"), "stodruga noga jo boli" ("the hundred and second leg hurts her"), "sedemnajsttisočtristoenainosemdeseti kovanec je bil rahlo umazan. ("the seventeen thousand three hundred and eighty-first coin was slightly dirty"), and "ob osmi uri zjutraj" ("at 8 o'clock in the morning"), however this sentence is normally written as "Ob 8. uri zjutraj" or "Ob 8h zjutraj" (Ob osmih zjutraj) or "Ob 8.00 zjutraj" (when minutes are defined, there is no "uri").

Collective numerals

* dvoje, troje, četvero, petero – used for plural mass nouns, as well as to emphasise diversity of what is counted (dvoje oči, dvoje vrat, troje ljudi (two eyes, two doors, three people))

Multiplicative numerals

* enojno, dvojno, trojno, četvorno, petorno (single, double, triple, quadraple, fivefold/quintuple) – used to name the amount of parts (dvojni ulomek (double fraction))
* enkraten, dvakraten, trikraten, štirikraten, petkraten (essentially the same meaning, but less often used)

Indefinite numerals

Indefinite numerals do not exactly define the number of the noun in question. These words are not inflected.
* dosti (quite a lot)
* mnogo (much)
* več (more)
* veliko (a lot)
* malo (little, a little)
* nekaj (a little)
* koliko (how much)
* toliko (this much)

* "Dosti" dela je šlo v nič, saj smo prepozno spoznali, da pisalni stroj ni imel papirja. ("Quite a bit" of work was futile, for we realised too late that the typewriter had not had paper.)

Adverbial numeral

These numerals include "enkrat", "dvakrat" (once, twice) and so forth, and "prvič" (or "prvikrat"), "drugič" (or "drugikrat") (the first time, the second time) and so forth.

* Osel gre samo enkrat na led. (A donkey goes onto ice only once.) (a Slovenian proverb)
* Ko drugič poskusiš, uvidiš, da že kar znaš. (When you try it the second time round, you realise that you already know it quite well.)

External links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Slovene grammar — The following is an overview of the grammar of the Slovene language.Grammatical numberThere are four types of inflexion related to the grammatical number in Slovene. The future tense shall be used to demonstrate its usage. The future tense is… …   Wikipedia

  • Slovene punctuation — Punctuation marks are one or two part graphical marks used in writing, denoting tonal progress, pauses, sentence type (syntactic use), abbreviations, et cetera.Marks used in Slovene include full stops (.), question marks (?), exclamation marks… …   Wikipedia

  • Dual (grammatical number) — Dual (abbreviated du) is a grammatical number that some languages use in addition to singular and plural. When a noun or pronoun appears in dual form, it is interpreted as referring to precisely two of the entities (objects or persons) identified …   Wikipedia

  • Keyboard layout — QWERTY keyboard on a laptop. A keyboard layout is any specific mechanical, visual, or functional arrangement of the keys, legends, or key–meaning associations (respectively) of a computer, typewriter, or other typographic keyboard. Mechanical… …   Wikipedia

  • Danish language — Danish dansk Pronunciation [danˀsɡ̊] Spoken in   …   Wikipedia

  • Early Cyrillic alphabet — Type Alphabet Languages Old Church Slavonic, Church Slavonic, old versions of many Slavic languages …   Wikipedia

  • Bulgarian language — Not to be confused with Bulgar language. Bulgarian Български език Bălgarski ezik Spoken in Bulgaria, Turkey, Serbia, Greece, Ukraine, Moldova, Romania, Albania, Kosovo, Repub …   Wikipedia

  • Diacritic — For the academic journal, see Diacritics (journal). The letter a with acute Diacritical marks …   Wikipedia

  • Tone (linguistics) — Not to be confused with intonation (linguistics). Top tone ◌̋ ˥ …   Wikipedia

  • Grammatical number — Grammatical categories Animacy Aspect Case Clusivity Definiteness Degree of comparison Evidentiality Focus …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”