number
English
editAlternative forms
editEtymology 1
editFrom Middle English number, nombre, numbre, noumbre, from Anglo-Norman noumbre, Old French nombre, from Latin numerus (“number”), ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *nem- (“to divide”). Compare Saterland Frisian Nummer, Nuumer, West Frisian nûmer, Dutch nummer (“number”), German Nummer (“number”), Danish nummer (“number”), Swedish nummer (“number”), Icelandic númer (“number”). Replaced Middle English ȝetæl and rime, more at tell, tale and rhyme.
Pronunciation
edit- (Received Pronunciation) enPR: nŭmʹbər, IPA(key): /ˈnʌmbə/
- (General American) enPR: nŭmʹbər, IPA(key): /ˈnʌmbɚ/
Audio (US): (file) - Rhymes: -ʌmbə(ɹ)
- Hyphenation: num‧ber
Noun
editnumber (plural numbers)
- (countable) An abstract entity used to describe quantity.
- Zero, one, −1, 2.5, and pi are all numbers.
- (countable) A numeral: a symbol for a non-negative integer.
- (countable, mathematics) An element of one of several sets: natural numbers, integers, rational numbers, real numbers, complex numbers, and sometimes extensions such as hypercomplex numbers, etc.
- The equation includes the most important numbers: 1, 0, , , and .
- (Followed by a numeral; used attributively) Indicating the position of something in a list or sequence. Abbreviations: No or No., no or no. (in each case, sometimes written with a superscript "o", like Nº or №). The symbol "#" is also used in this manner.
- Horse number 5 won the race.
- Quantity.
- 2013 June 8, “The new masters and commanders”, in The Economist, volume 407, number 8839, page 52:
- From the ground, Colombo’s port does not look like much. […] But viewed from high up in one of the growing number of skyscrapers in Sri Lanka’s capital, it is clear that something extraordinary is happening: China is creating a shipping hub just 200 miles from India’s southern tip.
- 1625, Francis [Bacon], “Of the True Greatness of Kingdoms and Estates”, in The Essayes […], 3rd edition, London: […] Iohn Haviland for Hanna Barret, →OCLC:
- Number itself importeth not much in armies where the people are of weak courage.
- Any number of people can be reading from a given repository at a time.
- A sequence of digits and letters used to register people, automobiles, and various other items.
- Her passport number is C01X864TN.
- (countable, informal) A telephone number.
- Let's give her a call. Do you have her number handy?
- I'm definitely interested. Here's my number. Call me back anytime.
- 1974, “Rikki Don't Lose That Number”, performed by Steely Dan:
- Rikki, don't lose that number / You don't wanna call nobody else / Send it off in a letter to yourself
- 2001, E. Forrest Hein, The Ruach Project,, Xulon Press, page 86:
- “[...] I wonder if you could get hold of him and have him call me here at Interior. I’m in my office, do you have my number?”
- 2007, Lindsey Nicole Isham, No Sex in the City: One Virgin's Confessions on Love, Lust, Dating, and Waiting, Kregel Publications, page 111:
- When I agreed to go surfing with him he said, “Great, can I have your number?” Well, I don’t give my number to guys I don’t know.
- 2016, VOA Learning English (public domain)
- (grammar) Of a word or phrase, the state of being singular, dual or plural, shown by inflection.
- Adjectives and nouns should agree in gender, number, and case.
- (now rare, in the plural) Poetic metres; verses, rhymes.
- a. 1631 (date written), J[ohn] Donne, “The Triple Foole”, in Poems, […] with Elegies on the Authors Death, London: […] M[iles] F[lesher] for Iohn Marriot, […], published 1633, →OCLC, page 204:
- Griefe brought to numbers cannot be ſo fierce, / For, he tames it, that fetters it in verſe.
- 1735 January 13 (Gregorian calendar; indicated as 1734), [Alexander] Pope, An Epistle from Mr. Pope, to Dr. Arbuthnot, London: […] J[ohn] Wright for Lawton Gilliver […], →OCLC, page 7, lines 124–125:
- As yet a Child, nor yet a Fool to Fame, / I liſp'd in Numbers, for the Numbers came.
- (countable) A performance; especially, a single song or song and dance routine within a larger show.
- For his second number, he sang "The Moon Shines Bright".
- (singular only, formal) A group of people.
- one of our number ― one of us
- 2020 August 22, Robert McCrum, “For ever and a day: why we turn to Shakespeare at times of crisis”, in The Observer[1]:
- As an association, we demonstrate near-Olympic sang-froid. As I write, the gods are smiling upon us, but in the past decade – not to mince words – two of our number have got divorced, one of us checked into rehab, and all of us have had distressful troubles with teenage kids.
- (countable, informal) A person.
- 1968, Janet Burroway, The dancer from the dance: a novel,, Little, Brown, page 40:
- I laughed. "Don't doubt that. She's a saucy little number."
- 1988, Erica Jong, Serenissima,, Dell, page 214:
- "Signorina Jessica," says the maid, a saucy little number, "your father has gone to his prayers and demands that you come to the synagogue at once [...]"
- 2005, Denise A. Agnew, Kate Hill, Arianna Hart, By Honor Bound,, Ellora's Cave Publishing, page 207:
- He had to focus on the mission, staying alive and getting out, not on the sexy number rubbing up against him.
- (countable, informal) An outfit, particularly a stylish one.
- 2007, Cesca Martin, Agony Angel: So You Think You've Got Problems...,, Troubador Publishing Ltd, page 134:
- The trouble was I was wearing my backless glittering number from the night before underneath, so unless I could persuade the office it was National Fancy Dress Day I was doomed to sweat profusely in bottle blue.
- 2007, Lorelei James, Running with the Devil, Samhain Publishing, Ltd, page 46:
- "I doubt the sexy number you wore earlier tonight fell from the sky."
- (slang, chiefly US) A marijuana cigarette, or joint; also, a quantity of marijuana bought from a dealer.
- 2009, Thomas Pynchon, Inherent Vice, Vintage, published 2010, page 12:
- Back at his place again, Doc rolled a number, put on a late movie, found an old T-shirt, and sat tearing it up into short strips […]
- (dated) An issue of a periodical publication.
- the latest number of a magazine
- A large amount, in contrast to a smaller amount; numerical preponderance.
- 1980 May 10, Al King, “Braves travel to New England with reputation”, in The Indiana Gazette:
- Despite last week's woes, the Braves still sport numbers that would make Christie Brinkley blush.
- An activity; assignment; job, as in cushy number.
Hyponyms
edit- See also Thesaurus:number
Derived terms
edit- 0800 number
- 11 o'clock number
- 800 number
- 900 number
- Abbe number
- abbreviated number
- abstract analytic number theory
- abstract number
- abundant number
- accession number
- account number
- Achilles number
- acid number
- additive number theory
- age is just a number
- aggregation number
- aleph number
- algebraic number
- algebraic number field
- algebraic number theory
- algorithmic number theory
- all-figure number
- amicable number
- analytic number theory
- angel number
- A number
- a number of
- any number of
- apocalyptic number
- Archimedes number
- Armstrong number
- atomic mass number
- atomic number
- Atwood number
- automorphic number
- autonumber
- Avogadro's number
- azimuthal quantum number
- back number
- Bagnold number
- baryon number
- basic reproduction number
- basic reproductive number
- Bates number
- Bejan number
- Bell number
- Bernoulli number
- Betti number
- bib number
- bicomplex number
- binary number
- Biot number
- book-number
- book number
- box number
- broken number
- by-the-numbers
- by the numbers
- cake number
- call number
- call someone's number
- carbon number
- Carmichael number
- Carol number
- Catalan number
- cetane number
- chromatic number
- chromosome number
- clique number
- cloud number nine
- collective number
- color by number
- color by numbers
- composite number
- computational number theory
- concrete number
- condition number
- contact number
- control number
- coordination number
- copy number
- copy number polymorphism
- copy-number variant
- copy number variation
- counting number
- covering number
- critical Reynolds number
- crossing number
- crossnumber
- crunch numbers
- Cullen number
- Cullum number
- curb number
- cushy number
- Cutter number
- cyclic number
- cyclomatic number
- decimal number
- defective number
- deficient number
- Delannoy number
- de Moivre number
- denumber
- dial number
- diamond number
- disc number
- distributive number
- do a number on
- domination number
- do numbers
- double-number
- double number
- dual number
- Dunbar's number
- edge covering number
- edge number
- electron number
- element number
- E number
- epsilon number
- Erdős number
- Erdos number
- Euler's number
- excessive number
- extended real number system
- false number 9
- fax number
- Fermat number
- Fibonacci number
- figurate number
- file off the serial numbers
- flight number
- floating-point number
- f-number
- fractional number
- frame number
- Fresnel number
- friendly number
- Frobenius number
- Froude number
- furry number
- geometry of numbers
- get someone's number
- GLIDE number
- Gödel number
- God's number
- Goldbach number
- golden number
- Graham's number
- Greek number
- Grundy number
- hailstone number
- happy number
- Hardy-Ramanujan number
- harmonic number
- Harshad number
- Hartogs number
- have one's number on it
- have someone's number
- Heegner number
- Heesch number
- hemiperfect number
- hexagonal number
- highly composite number
- Hodges number
- homogeneous number
- Horowitz number
- hyperbolic number
- hypercomplex number
- hypernumber
- hyperperfect number
- hyperreal number
- ideal number
- illegal number
- independence number
- interesting number paradox
- inverse number
- IP number
- item number
- Kaprekar number
- Keith number
- Kirschner number
- kissing number
- Knudsen number
- Köchel number
- Lah number
- law of large numbers
- Laws number
- Leonardo number
- lepton number
- Leyland number
- line number
- Liouville number
- Listing number
- L-number
- look for number one
- look out for number one
- lose the number of one's mess
- lot number
- Lucas number
- Ludolphian number
- Ludolph's number
- Lychrel number
- Mach number
- magic number
- magnetic quantum number
- make one's number
- make up the numbers
- Markov number
- mass number
- matching number
- matching numbers
- meandric number
- mesh number
- Messier number
- misnumber
- mixed number
- mobile number
- model number
- Motzkin number
- multinumber
- multiplicative number
- Narayana number
- narcissistic number
- natural numbers
- natural numbers object
- neutron number
- Newton number
- nimber
- Niven number
- non-hypotenuse number
- nonhypotenuse number
- nonstandard number
- nothing-up-my-sleeve number
- nucleon number
- nude number
- number 10
- number 2
- number 2 pencil
- numberable
- number close
- number coding
- number-cruncher
- number cruncher
- number crunching
- number-crunching
- number density
- number eight
- number eleven
- numberer
- number field
- number five
- number four
- numberful
- number game
- number homophone
- numberhood
- numberish
- numberless
- numberlike
- number line
- number needed to harm
- numberness
- number nine
- number one
- number one with a bullet
- numberous
- number pad
- number plate
- number ray
- number sentence
- number seven
- numbers game
- number sign
- number six
- numbers juggling
- numbersome
- numbers racket
- numbers station
- number system
- numbertaker
- number ten
- number-theoretic
- number-theoretical
- number-theoretically
- number-theoretic function
- number theoretician
- number theorist
- number theory
- number three
- number two
- numberwork
- numbery
- numeral
- numeric
- numerical
- oblong number
- occupation number
- octane number
- one's number is up
- orbital quantum number
- outnumber
- overnumber
- oxidation number
- p-adic number
- paint by numbers
- paint-by-numbers
- painting by numbers
- pancake number
- Pell number
- pentatope number
- perfect number
- perplex number
- personal identification number
- PIN number
- Pisot number
- Pisot-Vijayaraghavan number
- pitting resistance equivalent number
- plate number coil
- play number two
- Polenske number
- powerful number
- practical number
- Prandtl number
- preferred number
- premium-rate telephone number
- prenumber
- prime number theorem
- principal quantum number
- private enterprise number
- Proth number
- proton number
- pseudoperfect number
- pseudorandom number generator
- pseudo-random number generator
- public enemy number one
- purely imaginary number
- PV number
- pyramidal number
- quantum number
- quaternary number
- Ramanujan-Hardy number
- Ramsey number
- random number
- random number generator
- random number god
- rational numbers
- Rayo's number
- real number line
- real numbers
- real number system
- rectangular number
- registration number
- regnal number
- Reichert-Meissl number
- Reichert-Meissl-Wollny number
- renumber
- repfigit number
- research octane number
- Reynolds number
- Richardson number
- ringer equivalence number
- roll number
- rookie numbers
- round number bias
- Rouse number
- routing number
- RSA number
- sad number
- safety in numbers
- Sagan's number
- saponification number
- schizophrenic number
- Schröder number
- semiperfect number
- sex number
- Sierpinski number
- sieve number
- silent number
- single-number
- Skewes' number
- sociable number
- social insurance number
- social security number
- social-security number
- someone's number is up
- sphenic number
- spin quantum number
- split-complex number
- square number
- Stephanus number
- Stirling number
- Stirling number of the second kind
- Stirling partition number
- street number
- Strouhal number
- student number
- subnumber
- sunspot number
- superabundant number
- superior highly composite number
- supernumber
- superparticular number
- surreal number
- tailnumber
- tail number
- take a number
- taxicab number
- tetrahedral number
- there is safety in numbers
- there is strength in numbers
- times without number
- tone number
- total base number
- transcendental number
- transcendental number theory
- transfinite number
- trial number
- triangular number
- tricomplex number
- turn a number of shades of red
- turning number
- unhappy number
- unique identification number
- unknown number
- untouchable number
- vampire number
- vanity number
- vehicle identification number
- version number
- wavenumber
- wave number
- Weber number
- weed number
- weird number
- what is your phone number
- what number
- what's your phone number
- whole number
- winding number
- without number
- Wolf number
- Wratten number
- wrong number
- Zeisel number
- Zürich number
Descendants
editTranslations
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Verb
editnumber (third-person singular simple present numbers, present participle numbering, simple past and past participle numbered)
- (intransitive) To total or count; to amount to.
- I don’t know how many books are in the library, but they must number in the thousands.
- 1977, United States Congress. House. Committee on the Judiciary. Subcommittee on Crime, Federal Role in Criminal Justice and Crime Research, page 107:
- Do they number in the hundreds, do they number in the thousands? Do they number in the tens of thousand?
- (transitive, passive voice) To limit to a certain number; to reckon (as by fate) to be few in number.
- The old man knew that his days were numbered.
- 1867, The Days of England Not “numbered”: Reply to Sir Archibald Alison, page 1:
- THE DAYS OF ENGLAND NOT “NUMBERED.” REPLY TO SIR ARCHIBALD ALISON.
- 2018 February 6, Dan Bouk, How Our Days Became Numbered: Risk and the Rise of the Statistical Individual, University of Chicago Press, →ISBN, page 209:
- To conclude this book, we will let Lange’s photo and its three layers guide us. Each layer invites us to explore a different answer to this book's title question—how did our days become numbered?
- (transitive, literary or archaic) To count; to determine the quantity of.
- The king ordered that all his subjects be numbered.
- Who can number all the stars and who can count the desert sands?
- 1610, The Bible: That Is, the Holy Scriptures Contained in the Olde and New Testament, Numbers 1:3:
- From twentie yeare old and above, all that go forth to the warre in Iſrael, thou and Aaron ſhall number them, throughout their armies.
- (transitive) To label (items) with numbers; to assign numbers to (items).
- Number the baskets so that we can find them easily.
- 1964, Education U.S. Department of Health (and Welfare), United States. Public Health Service, Public Health Service Numbered Publications: Supplement:
- “Public Health Service Numbered Publications – A Catalog, 1950-1962” and contains those numbered publications issued during the period 1963-64.
- 1972, United States. National Archives and Records Service, Miscellaneous Numbered Records (the Manuscript File) in the War Department Collection of Revolutionary War Records, 1775-1790's, page 3:
- Most of the remaining records in the War Department Collection of Revolutionary War Records were designated "miscellaneous" records, consecutively numbered, and placed in a fourth large series of records that came to be known as […]
- 2022 September 4, Francis Lynde, The City of Numbered Days, DigiCat:
- The remainder of the valley is laid off into cute little squares and streets, with everything named and numbered, ready to be listed in the brokers’ offices.
- (transitive, with off) To call out and assign a series of numbers (usually to people), either for the sake of dividing into groups or for counting.
- Shelley numbered off the group into two teams for the baseball game.
- 1870, USA House of Representatives, House Documents, page 532:
- I counted them and numbered them off, and I found about three hundred and seventy or three hundred and seventy-five.
- 2014 March 3, Flora Johnston, War Classics: The Remarkable Memoir of Scottish Scholar Christina Keith on the Western Front, The History Press, →ISBN:
- At my entrance, the Sergeant called them to attention, numbered them off smartly, and presented two Companies for my instruction.
- (transitive, with off) To enumerate or list, especially while assigning numbers to.
- 2019 January 11, Mark G. Turner, We Both Shall Row, My Love And I, FriesenPress, →ISBN, page 367:
- I numbered them off on my fingers as I stated them. “First, I would redeem a small amount of my investment assets to pay off the cleared lot and come up with a down payment for the ten acres. Second, I would seek to obtain an open […]
- (transitive, usually with among) To classify or include (in a group of things)
- Alexander the Great's army numbered an elite cavalry among its ranks.
- 1839, Saint Cyprian (Bishop of Carthage.), The Treatises of S. Caecilius Cyprian, Bishop of Carthage, and Martyr, page 298:
- We fools counted their life madness, and their end to be without honour: how are they numbered among the children of God, and their lot is among the Saints!
- 1879, United States. Bureau of Indian Affairs, Report, page 76:
- They number among them men of intelligence and education, fitted in almost every respect to share in the responsibilities of government as well as receive a part of its benefits.
- 1963, United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Commerce, Hearings, page 69:
- We certainly endorse the essential purpose of S. 708 — namely, that an applicant should not obtain a grant simply because it numbers among its stockholders a Member of Congress […]
- 2019 August 6, Fr. Joseph Irvin, The Divine Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom: Orthodox Service Books - Number 1, Lulu Press, Inc, →ISBN:
- Unite them to Your Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church, and number them with Your chosen flock. That with us they may glorify Your all-honorable and majestic name: of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, now and ever and ever.
- (intransitive, usually with among) To be classified or included (in a certain group or category of things).
- Her horses number among the fastest in her country.
- 2010 September 3, Catherine Tizard, Cat Among the Pigeons: A Memoir, Penguin Random House New Zealand Limited, →ISBN:
- They number among our best people, particularly when we realise that they are models for what the rest of us might also achieve.
- 2020 October 1, Elizabeth Koepping, Spousal Violence Among World Christians: Silent Scandal, Bloomsbury Publishing, →ISBN:
- If they number among those who abuse their wives, they, just like abusing leaders, should stop.
Translations
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See also
edit- (grammatical numbers): singular, dual, trial, quadral, paucal, plural, singulative
- Wiktionary’s Appendix of numbers
References
editEtymology 2
editPronunciation
edit- (Received Pronunciation) enPR: nŭm'ə, IPA(key): /ˈnʌmə/
- (US) enPR: nŭm'ər, IPA(key): /ˈnʌmɚ/
Audio (US); “number” (adjective): (file) - Hyphenation: num‧ber
Adjective
editnumber
- comparative form of numb: more numb
Anagrams
editEstonian
editAlternative forms
editEtymology
editFrom German Nummer. The added -b- is analogous to kamber and klamber.
Pronunciation
editNoun
editnumber (genitive numbri, partitive numbrit)
- number (the symbol representing the number, its character)
- number plate, licence plate, license plate
- Synonym: numbrimärk
- number (periodical (numbered) single issue)
- Synonym: ajalehenumber
Declension
editDeclension of number (ÕS type 2/õpik, no gradation) | |||
---|---|---|---|
singular | plural | ||
nominative | number | numbrid | |
accusative | nom. | ||
gen. | numbri | ||
genitive | numbrite | ||
partitive | numbrit | numbreid | |
illative | numbrisse | numbritesse numbreisse | |
inessive | numbris | numbrites numbreis | |
elative | numbrist | numbritest numbreist | |
allative | numbrile | numbritele numbreile | |
adessive | numbril | numbritel numbreil | |
ablative | numbrilt | numbritelt numbreilt | |
translative | numbriks | numbriteks numbreiks | |
terminative | numbrini | numbriteni | |
essive | numbrina | numbritena | |
abessive | numbrita | numbriteta | |
comitative | numbriga | numbritega |
References
editMiddle English
editNoun
editnumber
- Alternative form of nombre
Papiamentu
editEtymology
editAn analogy of the Papiamentu word nòmber "name".
Noun
editnumber
- English terms derived from Proto-Indo-European
- English terms derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *nem-
- English terms inherited from Middle English
- English terms derived from Middle English
- English terms derived from Anglo-Norman
- English terms derived from Old French
- English terms derived from Latin
- English 2-syllable words
- English terms with IPA pronunciation
- English terms with audio pronunciation
- Rhymes:English/ʌmbə(ɹ)
- Rhymes:English/ʌmbə(ɹ)/2 syllables
- English lemmas
- English nouns
- English countable nouns
- English terms with usage examples
- en:Mathematics
- English terms with quotations
- English informal terms
- en:Grammar
- English terms with rare senses
- English singularia tantum
- English formal terms
- English terms with collocations
- English slang
- American English
- English dated terms
- English verbs
- English intransitive verbs
- English transitive verbs
- English literary terms
- English terms with archaic senses
- English non-lemma forms
- English comparative adjectives
- English heteronyms
- en:Arithmetic
- en:Parts of speech
- Estonian terms borrowed from German
- Estonian terms derived from German
- Estonian terms with IPA pronunciation
- Rhymes:Estonian/umber
- Rhymes:Estonian/umber/2 syllables
- Estonian lemmas
- Estonian nouns
- Estonian õpik-type nominals
- Middle English lemmas
- Middle English nouns
- Papiamentu terms derived from English
- Papiamentu lemmas
- Papiamentu nouns