девѧносто

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Old East Slavic

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Numeral

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девѧносто (devęnosto)

  1. Alternative form of девѧносъто (devęnosŭto, ninety (90))

Old Ruthenian

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Old Ruthenian numbers (edit)
900
 ←  80 90 100  → 
9
    Cardinal: девѧносто (devjanosto), девѧтьдесѧтъ (devjatʹdesjat)
    Ordinal: девѧтьдесѧтый (devjatʹdesjatyj)

Alternative forms

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Etymology

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PIE word
*h₁néwn̥dḱomt

Inherited from Old East Slavic девѧно́съто (devęnósŭto), from Proto-Slavic *devę(t)nòsъto, ultimately from Proto-Balto-Slavic *newin(t)śumta, from Proto-Indo-European *h₁néwn̥(d)ḱm̥tom, from *h₁néwn̥dḱomt (90), from *h₁néwn̥ (nine) + *déḱm̥ (ten).[1][2][3][4] Cognate with Russian девяно́сто (devjanósto), Old Novgorodian девѧносото (devęnosoto), девѧносъто (devęnosŭto), Old Polish dziewiętnosto.

Numeral

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девѧно́сто (devjanósto)

  1. ninety (90)
    Synonyms: девѧтьдесѧ́ть (devjatʹdesjátʹ), ·ч҃· (·č:·)

Descendants

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  • Belarusian: дзевяно́ста (dzjevjanósta)
  • Ukrainian: дев'яно́сто (devʺjanósto)

References

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  1. ^ Trubachyov, Oleg, editor (1977), “*devę(t)nosъto / *devęsъto?”, in Этимологический словарь славянских языков (in Russian), numbers 4 (*čaběniti – *děľa), Moscow: Nauka, page 220
  2. ^ Melnychuk, O. S., editor (1985), “дев'яносто”, in Етимологічний словник української мови (in Ukrainian), volume 2 (Д – Копці), Kyiv: Naukova Dumka, page 21:ст. девяносто, девеносто (XIV ст.)st. devjanosto, devenosto (XIV st.)
  3. ^ Martynaŭ, V. U., editor (1985), “дзевяно́ста”, in Этымалагічны слоўнік беларускай мовы (in Belarusian), volumes 3 (га! – інчэ́), Minsk: Navuka i technika, page 132
  4. ^ Anikin, A. E. (2019) “девяно́сто”, in Русский этимологический словарь (in Russian), issue 13 (два – дигло), Moscow: Russian Language Institute, →ISBN, page 100

Further reading

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