NUMERALS
[*] 347. The numeral adjectives and corresponding adverbs are as follows:
| SIGN | | CARDINAL | ORDINAL | ADVERB |
| 1 | α᾽ | εἷς, μία, ἕν one | πρῶτος first | ἅπαξ once |
| 2 | β᾽ | δύο two | δεύτερος second | δίς twice |
| 3 | γ᾽ | τρεῖς, τρία three | τρίτος third | τρίς thrice |
| 4 | δ᾽ | τέτταρες, τέτταρα | τέταρτος, -η, -ον | τετράκις |
| | (τέσσαρες, τέσσαρα) |
| 5 | ε᾽ | πέντε | πέμπτος | πεντάκις |
| 6 | σ᾽ | ἕξ | ἕκτος | ἑξάκις |
| 7 | ζ᾽ | ἑπτά | ἕβδομος | ἑπτάκις |
| 8 | η᾽ | ὀκτώ | ὄγδοος | ὀκτάκις |
| 9 | θ᾽ | ἐννέα | ἔνατος | ἐνάκις |
| 10 | ι᾽ | δέκα | δέκατος, -η, -ον | δεκάκις |
| 11 | ια᾽ | ἕνδεκα | ἑνδέκατος | ἑνδεκάκις |
| 12 | ιβ᾽ | δώδεκα | δωδέκατος | δωδεκάκις |
| 13 | ιγ᾽ | τρεῖς (τρία) καὶ δέκα | τρίτος καὶ δέκατος | τρεισκαιδεκάκις |
| | (or τρεισκαίδεκα) | |
| 14 | ιδ᾽ | τέτταρες (τέτταρα) καὶ | τέταρτος καὶ δέκατος | τετταρεσκαιδεκάκις |
| | δέκα |
| 15 | ιε᾽ | πεντεκαίδεκα | πέμπτος καὶ δέκατος | πεντεκαιδεκάκις |
| 16 | ισ᾽ | ἑκκαίδεκα (for ἑξκαίδεκα | ἕκτος καὶ δέκατος | ἑκκαιδεκάκις |
| | 103) |
| 17 | ιζ᾽ | ἑπτακαίδεκα | ἕβδομος καὶ δέκατος | ἑπτακαιδεκάκις |
| 18 | ιη᾽ | ὀκτωκαίδεκα | ὄγδοος καὶ δέκατος | ὀκτωκαιδεκάκις |
| 19 | ιθ᾽ | ἐννεακαίδεκα | ἔνατος καὶ δέκατος | ἐννεακαιδεκάκις |
| 20 | κ᾽ | εἴκοσι (ν) | εἰκοστός, -ή, -όν | εἰκοσάκις |
| 21 | κα᾽ | εἷς καὶ εἴκοσι (ν) or | πρῶτος καὶ εἰκοστός | εἰκοσάκις ἅπαξ |
| | εἴκοσι (καὶ) εἷς |
| 30 | λ᾽ | τριά_κοντα | τρια_κοστός | τρια_κοντάκις |
| 40 | μ᾽ | τετταράκοντα | τετταρακοστός | τετταρακοντάκις |
| 50 | ν᾽ | πεντήκοντα | πεντηκοστός | πεντηκοντάκις |
| 60 | ξ᾽ | ἑξήκοντα | ἑξηκοστός | ἑξηκοντάκις |
| 70 | ο᾽ | ἑβδομήκοντα | ἑβδομηκοστός | ἑβδομηκοντάκις |
| 80 | π᾽ | ὀγδοήκοντα | ὀγδοηκοστός | ὀγδοηκοντάκις |
| 90 | ϟ | ἐνενήκοντα | ἐνενηκοστός | ἐνενηκοντάκις |
| 100 | ρ᾽ | ἑκατόν | ἑκατοστός, -ή, -όν | ἑκατοντάκις |
| 200 | σ᾽ | δια_κόσιοι, -αι, -α | δια_κοσιοστός | δια_κοσιάκις |
| 300 | τ᾽ | τρια_κόσιοι | τρια_κοσιοστός | τρια_κοσιάκις |
| 400 | υ᾽ | τετρακόσιοι | τετρακοσιοστός | τετρακοσιάκις |
| 500 | φ᾽ | πεντακόσιοι | πεντακοσιοστός | πεντακοσιάκις |
| 600 | χ᾽ | ἑξακόσιοι | ἑξακοσιοστός | ἑξακοσιάκις |
| 700 | ψ᾽ | ἑπτακόσιοι | ἑπτακοσιοστός | ἑπτακοσιάκις |
| 800 | ω᾽ | ὀκτακόσιοι | ὀκτακοσιοστός | ὀκτακοσιάκις |
| 900 | [σαμπι ] | ἐνακόσιοι | ἐνακοσιοστός | ἐνακοσιάκις |
| 1,000 | [τνυμ ]α | χί_λιοι, -αι, -α | χι_λιοστός, -ή, -όν | χι_λιάκις |
| 2,000 | [τνυμ ]β | δισχί_λιοι | δισχι_λιοστός | δισχι_λιάκις |
| 3,000 | [τνυμ ]γ | τρισχί_λιοι | τρισχι_λιοστός | τρισχι_λιάκις |
| 10,000 | [τνυμ ]ι | μύ_ριοι, -αι, -α | μυ_ριοστός | μυ_ριάκις |
| 20,000 | [τνυμ ]κ | δισμύ_ριοι | δισμυ_ριοστός | δισμυ_ριάκις |
| 100,000 | [τνυμ ]ρ | δεκακισμύ_ριοι | δεκακισμυ_ριοστός | δεκακισμυ_ριάκις |
N.—Above 10,000:
δύο μυ_ριάδες 20,000, etc.,
μυ_ριάκις μύ_ριοι, i.e. 10,000 x 10,000.
[*] 347 D. 1. For the cardinals 1-4, see 349 D. Hom. has, for 12,
δώδεκα (for
δϝωδεκα),
δυώδεκα, and
δυοκαίδεκα (also generally poetic); 20,
εἴκοσι and
ἐείκοσι; 30,
τριήκοντα; 80,
ὀγδώκοντα; 90,
ἐνενήκοντα and
ἐννήκοντα; 200 and 300,
διηκόσιοι, τριηκόσιοι; 9000 and 10,000,
ἐννεάχι_λοι, δεκάχι_λοι (
-χειλοι?). He has also the ordinals 3d,
τρίτατος; 4th,
τέτρατος; 7th,
ἑβδόματος; 8th,
ὀγδόατος; 9th,
εἵνατος; 12th,
δυωδέκατος; 13th,
τρι_ς (
τρεισ-?)
καιδέκατος; 20th,
ἐεικοστός; and the Attic form of each.
2. Hdt. has
δυώδεκα (
δυωδέκατος),
τεσσερεσκαίδεκα indeclinable (
τεσσερεσκαιδέκατος),
τριήκοντα (
τριηκοστός),
τεσσεράκοντα, ὀγδώκοντα, διηκόσιοι (
διηκοσιοστός),
τριηκόσιοι: for
ἔνατος he has
εἴνατος, and so
εἰνάκις, εἰνακόσιοι, εἰνακισχί_λιοι.
3. Aeolic has
πέμπε for 5 (cp. Hom.
πεμπώβολον five-pronged fork), gen. plur.
πέμπων inflected, as also
δέκων, τεσσερακόντων, etc.; for 1000,
χέλλιοι. Doric has, for 1,
ἧς (37 D. 2); 4,
τέτορες; 6,
ϝέξ; 7th,
ἕβδεμος; 12,
δυώδεκα; 20,
ϝί_κατι, ϝείκατι; 40,
τετρώκοντα (
τετρωκοστός); 200, etc.,
δια_κατίοι, etc.; 1000,
χηλίοι and
χειλίοι (37 D. 2); for 1st,
πρᾶτος.
[*] 348.
Notation.—The system of alphabetic notation came into use after the second century B.C. The first nine letters stand for units, the second nine for tens, the third nine for hundreds (
27 letters). In addition to the 24 letters of the alphabet, three obsolete signs are employed:
ς, a form identical with the late abbreviation for
στ, in place of the lost
ϝ (3), once used for 6; ϟ (
koppa), in the same order as Lat.
q, for 90; for 900, [sampi ]
sampi, probably for
san, an old form of
sigma, +
pi. From 1 to 999 a stroke stands
above the letter, for 1000's the same signs are used but with the stroke
below the letter (
α# = 1,
[τνυμ ]α =
1000). Only the last letter in any given series has the stroke above:
ρνζ# 157,
υα# 401,
[τνυμ ]α[σαμπι ]ι# 1910.
α̈ is sometimes used for 10,000;
β̈ for 20,000, etc.
a. In the classical period the following system was used according to the inscriptions:
Ι = 1,
ΙΙΙΙ = 4,
Γ (
πέντε) = 5,
ΓΙ = 6,
Δ (
δέκα) = 10,
ΔΔ = 20,
Η (
ἑκατόν) = 100,
ΗΗ = 200,
Χ = 1000,
Μ = 10,000,
Ι (
πεντάκις δέκα) = 50,
ΓχΧ (
πεντάκις χί_λιοι ¨ χί_λιοι) = 6000.
b. For the numbers from 1 to 24 the letters, used in continuous succession, are frequently used to designate the books of the
Iliad (
Α, Β, Γ, etc.) and of the
Odyssey (
α, β, γ, etc.).
[*] 349. The cardinals from 1 to 4 are declined as follows:
a. εἷς is for
ἑν-ς (cp.
245). The stem
ἑν was originally
σεμ (Lat.
semel,
simplex,
singuli), weak forms of which are
ἅ-παξ, ἁ-πλοῦς, from
σμ-π- (35 b).
μία stands for
σμ-ια.
b. οὐδὲ εἷς, μηδὲ εἷς not even one unite (with change in accent) to form the compounds
οὐδείς, μηδείς no one. These words are declined like
εἷς: thus,
οὐδείς, οὐδεμία, οὐδέν, οὐδενός, οὐδεμιᾶς, οὐδενός, etc., and sometimes in the plural (
no men,
none or
nobodies)
οὐδένες, οὐδένων, οὐδέσι, οὐδένας. For emphasis the compounds may be divided, as
οὐδὲ εἷς not ONE. A preposition or
ἄν may separate the two parts, as
οὐδ᾽ ἀπὸ μιᾶς from not a single one,
οὐδ᾽ ἂν ἑνί ne uni quidem.
c. πρῶτος (
primus) means the first among more than two,
πρότερος (
prior) the first of two.
d. δύο may be used with the gen. and dat. pl., as
δύο μνηνῶν of two months.
δὺοῖν occurs rarely with plurals:
παισὶν . . . δυοῖν D. 39.32.
δυεῖν for
δυοῖν does not appear till about 300 B.C.
e. ἄμφω both, N. A.
ἄμφω, G. D.
ἀμφοῖν (Lat.
ambo). But
both is more commonly
ἀμφότεροι, -αι, -α.
f. For
τέτταρες, -ράκοντα, etc., early Attic prose and tragedy have
τέσσαρες, etc.
g. The first numeral is inflected in
τρεῖς καὶ δέκα 13,
τέτταρες καὶ δέκα 14
τρεισκαίδεκα and Ionic
τεσσερεσκαίδεκα (very rare in Attic) are indeclinable.
[*] 349 D. Hom. has, for
μία, ἴα (
ἰῆς, ἰῇ, ἴαν); for
ἑνί, ἰῷ; δύο, δύω (undeclined); the adj. forms
δοιώ and pl.
δοιοί regularly declined. For 4,
τέσσαρες, (Aeolic)
πίσυρες; Pind. has
τέτρασιν. Hdt. has
δύο sometimes undeclined, also
δυῶν, δυοῖσι; τέσσερες, -α, τεσσέρων, τέσσερσι; τεσσερεσκαίδεκα 14 undeclined. Aeolic
δύεσιν 2;
πέσσυρες, πέσυρα for 4.
[*] 350. The cardinals from 5 to 199 are indeclinable; from 200 the cardinals, and all the ordinals from
first on, are declined like
ἀγαθός.
a. Compound numbers above 20 are expressed by placing the smaller number first (with
καί) or the larger number first (with or without
καί).
b. For 21st, 31st, etc.,
εἷς (for
πρῶτος)
καὶ εἰκοστός (
τρια_κοστός) is permissible, but otherwise the cardinal is rarely thus joined with the ordinal.
c. Compounds of 10, 20, etc., with 8 and 9 are usually expressed by subtraction with the participle of
δέω lack, as 18, 19,
δυοῖν (
ἑνὸς)
δέοντες εἴκοσι. So
ναυσὶ μιᾶς δεούσαις τεττάρακοντα with 39 ships,
δυοῖν δέοντα πεντήκοντα ἔτη 48 years; and with ordinals
ἑνὸς δέον εἰκοστὸν ἔτος the 19th year. The same method may be employed in other numbers than 8's or 9's:
ἑπτὰ ἀποδέοντες τρια_κόσιοι, i.e. 293.
d. An ordinal followed by
ἐπὶ δέκα denotes the day of the month from the 13th to the 19th, as
πέμπτῃ ἐπὶ δέκα on the 15th.
[*] 351. With the collective words (
996)
ἡ ἵππος cavalry,
ἡ ἀσπίς men with shields, numerals in
-ιοι may appear even in the singular:
δια_κοσία_ ἵππος 200
horse T. 1.62,
ἀσπὶς μυ_ρία_ καὶ τετρακοσία_ 10,
400 horse X. A. 1.7.10.
[*] 352.
μύ_ριοι, the greatest number expressed by a single word, means 10,000;
μυ_ρίοι,
countless,
infinite. In the latter sense the singular may be used, as
μυ_ρία_ ἐρημία_ infinite solitude P. L. 677 E.
[*] 353.
Fractions are expressed in several ways:
ἥμισυς 1/2,
ὁ ἥμισυς τοῦ ἀριθμοῦ half the number,
αἱ ἡμίσειαι τῶν νεῶν half of the ships,
τὸ ἥμισυ τοῦ στρατοῦ half the army,
ἡμιτάλαντον half a talent; τρία ἡμιτάλαντα 1 1/2
talents,
τρίτον ἡμίμναιον 2 1/2
minae; τριτημόριον 1/3,
πεμπτημόριον 1/5,
ἐπίτριτος 1 1/3,
ἐπίπεμπτος 1 1/5,
τῶν πέντε αί δύο μοῖραι 2/5. But when the numerator is less by
one than the denominator, the genitive is omitted and only the article and
μέρη are used: as
τὰ τρία μέρη 3/4, i.e.
the three parts (scil.
of four).
[*] 354. Other classes of numeral words.
a. Distributives proper, answering the question
how many each? are wanting in Greek. Instead,
ἀνά, εἰς, and
κατά, with the accus., and compounds of
σύν with, are used:
κατὰ δύο or
σύνδυο two by two, two each (Lat.
bini). The cardinals are often used alone, as ““
ἀνδρὶ ἑκάστῳ δώσω πέντε ἀργυρίου μνᾶς”
singulis militibus dabo quinas argenti minas”
X. A. 1.4.13.
b. Multiplicatives in
-πλοῦς -
fold (from
-πλοος, Lat. -
plex),
ἁπλοῦς simple,
διπλοῦς twofold,
τριπλοῦς threefold,
πολλαπλοῦς manifold.
c. Proportionals in
-πλασιος:
διπλάσιος twice as great or (plur.)
as many,
πολλαπλάσιος many times as great (
many).
d. διττός means
double,
τριττός treble (from
διχ-ιος, τριχ-ιος 112).
N.—
Multiplication.—Adverbs answering the question
how many times? are used in multiplication:
τὰ δὶς πέντε δέκα ἐστίν twice five are ten. See also
347 N.
e. Abstract and Collective Numbers in
-άς (gen.
-άδ-ος), all feminine:
ἑνάς or
μονάς the number one, unity,
monad,
δυάς the number two, duality,
τριάς trinity,
triad,
δεκάς decad,
decade,
εἰκάς, ἑκατοντάς, χι_λιάς, μυ_ριάς myriad,
ἑκατὸν μυ_ριάδες a million. Also in
-ύς:
τριττύς (
-ύος)
the third of a tribe (properly
the number three),
τετρακύς.
f. Adjectives in
-αῖος, answering the question
on what day? δευτεραῖος (or
τῇ δευτεραίᾳ)
ἀπῆλθε he departed on the second day.
g. Adverbs of Division.—
μοναχῇ singly,
in one way only,
δίχα, διχῇ in two parts,
doubly,
τριχῇ, τέτραχα, etc.,
πολλαχῇ in many ways,
πανταχῇ in every way.
[*] 354 D. Hdt. has
διξός (from
διχθ-ιος),
τριξός for
διττός, τριττός; also
-πλησιος and
-φασιος. Hom. has
δίχα and
διχθά, τρίχα and
τριχθά; τριπλῇ, τετραπλῇ.