The Greek & Latin Roots of English (20 page)

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Authors: Tamara M. Green

Tags: #Language Arts & Disciplines, #Linguistics, #General, #Vocabulary, #Etymology

BOOK: The Greek & Latin Roots of English
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The Tomb of the Diver. Fifth-century BCE wall painting (Paestum, Italy)

Ten is the very nature of number. The Greeks and all barbarians alike count up to ten, and having reached ten, revert again to the single unit
.

AETIUS (first-century CE Greek philosopher)

COUNTDOWN

The similarities among the words for the numbers one through ten were one of the first clues that led scholars of comparative and historical linguistics to posit a common ancestry for what is now called the Indo-European family of languages.

numerus, numeri = number

arithmos (άριθμός) = number

Let Me Count the Ways (in Indo-European) …

 

One
Two
Three
Sanskrit
ekas
dvau
trayah
Persian
yek
do
se
Gaelic
aon
dhà
trì
Albanian
njē
dy
tre
Pashto
yaw
dwa
dre
German
ein
zwei
drei
Russian
odin
dva
tri

LATIN NUMBERS

 

Cardinal Numbers
Roman Numerals
English Combining Form
Example
  1. unum
I
uni-
uniform
  2. duo
II
duo- or du-
duet
  3. tres
III
tri-
triangle
  4. quattuor
IV
quadri-
quadrilateral
  5. quinque
V
quinqu-
quinquennial
  6. sex
VI
sexi- or sex-
sextet
  7. septem
VII
sept-
September
  8. octo
VIII
oct- or octa-
octet
  9. novem
IX
novem- or noven-
November
10. decem
X
decem- or deca-
December
100. centum
C
centi- or cent-
centigrade
1,000. mille
M
milli- or mill-
millennium
How Long Did You Say I Have to Wait Here?
In the seventeenth century, when an outbreak of bubonic plague spread across Europe bringing death and devastation, the rulers of Venice ruled that ships arriving from plague-infested places had to wait for forty days before passengers could disembark, in order to insure that no one on the boat was infected with the disease. The Italian
Quarantina giorni
(forty days) is derived from
quadraginta
, the Latin word for forty. What is the current meaning of the English word
quarantine
?

Examples of Roman Numerals

 

XI = 11
XIX = 19
XX = 20
XXV = 25
XXXVI = 36
LIII = 53
LXIV = 64
XCIV = 94
CLXXIX = 179
CCX = 210
CCCXLVII = 347
CDXVII = 418
DLXVII = 567
MDCCCLXXXV = 1885
MCMLXXXIV = 1984
It's Nothing
Although they certainly understood the quality of “nothingness,” neither the Greeks nor the Romans had a symbol that indicated zero, or the absence of quantity. The arithmetic representation of zero was devised by Hindu mathematicians and given an Arabic name
(sifr
= emptiness) by medieval Muslim scientists. The word passed into English in two forms:
cipher
and
zero
.

 

Latin Word
English Meaning
nihil
nothing
nullum, nullius
no, none

Latin Ordinal Numbers

 

Ordinal Numbers
English Meaning
Example
primum
first
primary
secundum
second
second
tertium
third
tertiary
quartum
fourth
quart
quintum
fifth
quintet
sextum
sixth
sextuple
septimum
seventh
septimal
octavum
eighth
octave
nonum
ninth
nonagenarian
decimum
tenth
decimal
We the People
In 1782, at the end of the American Revolutionary War,
e pluribus unum
was adopted as the official motto of the United States and inscribed on the Great Seal. You can find its image on all American paper currency.
E pluribus unum
= out of many, one

Latin Numerical Adverbs and Adjectives

 

Numerical Adverbs and Adjectives
English Meaning
Combining Form
Example
solum, solius
single, alone
soli-
solitary
sesqui
one and a half
sesqui-
sesquicentennial
bis
twice
bi-
biennial
semi-
1
half
semi-
semiannual
ambo
both
ambi-
ambidextrous

“Take my word for it. The answer is two. I'm a college graduate.”
  (
www.cartoonstock.com
)

GREEK NUMBERS

 

Cardinal Numbers
English Combining Form
Example
  1. hen (ἕν)
heno-
henotheist
     monon (μόνον)
mono-
monogram
  2. dyo (δύο)
dyo- or dy-
dyad
  3. tris (τρει̑ς)
tri-
trigonometry
  4. tessara or tettara (τέσσαρα, τέτταρα)
tetra-
tetrahedron
  5. pente (πέντε)
pent- or penta-
pentathlon
  6. hex (ἕξ)
hexa-
hexameter
  7. hepta (ἑπτά)
hepta-
heptagon
  8. octo (ὀκτώ)
octo- or octa-
octopus
  9. ennea (ἐννέα)
ennea-
ennead
10. deca (δέκα)
deca-
decalogue
100. hecaton (ἐκατόν)
hecto-
2
hectogram
1,000. chilioi (χ́ίλιοι)
chilo- or kilo-
chiliastic, kilogram

Greek Ordinal Numbers

 

Ordinal Numbers
English Meaning
English Combining Form
Example
proton (πρω̑τον)
first
proto-
prototype
deuteron (δεύτερον)
second
deutero-
Deuteronomy

Other Greek ordinal numbers are rarely used in English compounds.

Greek Numerical Adverbs

 

Numerical Adverbs
English Meaning
English Combining Form
Example
dis (δίς)
twice
di-
dilemma
hemi (ήμι-)
half
hemi-
hemisphere
The Years Fly By …
If we wish to note an anniversary, we can use the Latin numerical prefix with the combining form of the Latin noun for year.
annus, anni (year) > -ennial
e.g., centum + annus = centennial
It's Over
He asked for a finite number of ideas, but his speech went on to infinity. finio-finire-finitum = limit, fix; close
So Stop Wasting Time
The Romans called the point at which three roads met a
trivium
, a term that was also used to describe a public street. Perhaps because it was out in the open and therefore common, or perhaps because people would just hang out there, not talking about anything important, the topics of discussion could be described as
trivial
(via, viae = road).

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