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The Old English Numeral

The Old English language preserves the system of declension only for numerals from 1 to 3. Here is the list of the cardinal numerals:

1 ān

20 twentig

2 twā

21 twentig ond ān 

3 þrīe

30 þrītig

4 fēower

40 fēowertig

5 fīf

50 fīftig

6 six, syx, siex

60 siextig

7 seofon, syofn

70 siofontig

8 eahta

80 eahtatig

9 nigon

90 nigontig

10 tien, týn

100 hundtēontig, hund, hundred

11 endlefan

110 hundælleftig

12 twelf

120 hundtwelftig

13 þrīotīene

200 tū hund

14 fēowertīene

1000 þūsend

15 fīftīene

2000 tū þūsendu

1 ān is declined just like a strong adjective, can be only singular, but has masculine, neuter and feminine genders. It is the source of the future indefinite article 'a, an' in Modern English. So 'a house' in fact means "one house", here -n disappeared before a consonant.

2 twā:

Masculine

Neuter

Feminine

Nominative

twegen    

tū, twā

twā

Genitive

twēgea, twēgra

Dative

twǣm, twām

Accusative

twegen

tū, twā

twā

No number can be changed for this numeral, and originally this numeral was dual, which seems natural.

3 þrīe:

Masculine

Neuter

Feminine

Nominative

þrīe, þrī, þrý    

þrīo, þrēo

þrīo, þrēo

Genitive

þrīora, þrēora

Dative

þrīm

Accusative

þrīe, þrī, þrý

þrīo, þrēo

þrīo, þrēo

The numeral begen, bū, bā(both) is declined the same way astwāand is also dual.

Ordinal numerals  use the suffix -taor-þa, etymologically a common Indo-European one (*-to-).

1 forma, fyresta

14 fēowertēoþa

2 ōþer, æfterra

15 fīftēoþa

3 þridda, þirda

16 sixtēoþa

4 fēorþa

17 siofontēoþa

5 fīfta

18 eahtatēoþa

6 siexta, syxta

19 nigontēoþa

7 siofoþa

20 twentigoþa

8 eahtoþa

30 þrittigoþa

9 nigoþa

40 fēowertigoþa

10 tēoþa

50 fīftigoþa

11 endlefta

12 twelfta

100 hundtēontiogoþa

13 þreotēoþa

The two variants for the word "first" actually mean different attributes: formais translated as "forward", andfyrestais "the farthest", "the first". Again double variants for the second nominal mean respectively "the other" and "the following".

Mainly according to Old English texts ordinal numerals were used with the demonstrative pronoun þābefore them. This is where the definite article in'the first', 'the third' comes from.

The Old English Adverb

They can be either primary (original adverbs) or derive from the adjectives. In fact, adverbs appeared in the language rather late, and eraly Proto-Indo-European did not use them, but later some auxiliary nouns and pronouns losing their declension started to play the role of adverbial modifiers.

In Old English the basic primary adverbs were the following ones:

þa (then);

þonne (then);

þǣr (there);

þider (thither);

nū (now);

hēr (here);

hider (hither);

heonan (hence);

sóna (soon);

oft (often);

eft (again);

swā (so);

hwīlum (sometimes).

Secondary adverbs originated from the instrumental singular of the neuter adjectives of strong declension. They all add the suffix -e:wide(widely),dēope(deeply),fæste(fast),hearde(hard). Another major sugroup of them used the suffixes-līc, -līcefrom more complexed adjectives:bealdlīce(boldly),freondlīce(in a friendly way).

Adverbs, as well as adjectives, had their degrees of comparison:

wīde – wīdor – wīdost (widely – more widely – most widely).