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Quantifiers include cardinal numerals, and other words which indicate some quantity.
The base numbers, from which all cardinal numerals can be constructed, are:
The following is the list of basic cardinal numerals with their spelling in the modern Turkish alphabet.
The formal system of cardinal numerals, as used in Classical Arabic, is extremely complex.
The cardinal numerals in the Macedonian language are:
(Cardinal numerals are described in the numeral section.)
Cardinal numerals for counting humans are derived from the non-human numerals through Ca-reduplication.
The cardinal numerals of numbers greater than 1000 are grouped in "multiples of 1000" or divided by points:
Numerals (or numbers) consist of two types: cardinal numerals and ordinal numerals.
There are several different kinds of numeral words in Latin: the two most common are cardinal numerals, and ordinal numerals.
(See Vietnamese syntax: Cardinal numerals.)
For the cardinal numerals higher than 20 between the multiples of 10 (i.e., 21-29, 31-39, 41-49, etc.), there are two types of formations.
Cardinal numerals zweinzug "20" through zëhanzug "100" are indeclinable nouns, with an associated noun in the genitive plural.
There are several types of numerals: cardinal numerals, ordinal numerals, collective numerals and multiplicative numerals.
Of the cardinal numerals from 1 to 10, 1 is an adjective, 2 is formally a noun in the dual and the rest are nouns in the singular.
The Georgian cardinal numerals up to ten are primitives, as are the words for 20 and 100, and also "million", "billion", etc. (The word for 1000, though, is not a primitive.)
Tithe goes back to a prehistoric West Germanic form *tehuntha-, formed from the cardinal numeral *tehun, "ten," and the same ordinal suffix that survives in Modern English as -th.
The cardinal numerals from 21 to 99 (apart from the tens) are constructed in a regular way, by adding -èn- (and) and the name of the appropriate multiple of ten to the name of the units position.
The n disappeared before the th in the West Germanic dialect area that gave rise to English, and eventually yielded the Old English form tothe, "tenth," still not too different from the cardinal numeral ten."
Cardinal numerals feor, fior "four" through zwelif "twelve" are indeclinable adjectives when standing before a noun, but after a noun or when used as a noun decline as follows (approximately, as i-stems):