Counting in Latinesce

Language overview

Forty-two in Latinesce Latinesce is a constructed language invented by the British ideolinguist George J. Henderson, also known as P. Hoinix. Proposed as an international auxiliary language (or auxlang) in 1901, Latinesce draws its lexicon from Latin and words that have become international, with an Italian pronunciation. It is an analytical language with seven flexions, to indicate the plural of nouns, the comparative and the superlative, as well as grammatical tenses.

Due to lack of data, we can only count accurately up to 100 in Latinesce. Please contact me if you can help me counting up from that limit.

Latinesce numbers list

  • 1 – un
  • 2 – du
  • 3 – tré
  • 4 – quat
  • 5 – quinc
  • 6 – sex
  • 7 – sept
  • 8 – oct
  • 9 – nov
  • 10 – dec
  • 11 – dec-un
  • 12 – dec-du
  • 13 – dec-tré
  • 14 – dec-quat
  • 15 – dec-quinc
  • 16 – dec-sex
  • 17 – dec-sept
  • 18 – dec-oct
  • 19 – dec-nov
  • 20 – du-decs
  • 30 – tré-decs
  • 40 – quat-decs
  • 50 – quinc-decs
  • 60 – sex-decs
  • 70 – sept-decs
  • 80 – oct-decs
  • 90 – nov-decs
  • 100 – cent

Latinesce numbering rules

Now that you’ve had a gist of the most useful numbers, let’s move to the writing rules for the tens, the compound numbers, and why not the hundreds, the thousands and beyond (if possible).

  • Digits from one to nine are rendered by specific words, namely un [1], du [2], tré [3], quat [4], quinc [5], sex [6], sept [7], oct [8], and nov [9].
  • Tens are formed starting with the multiplier unit, linked with a hyphen to the plural form of the word for ten (decs), except for ten: dec [10], du-decs [20], tré-decs [30], quat-decs [40], quinc-decs [50], sex-decs [60], sept-decs [70], oct-decs [80], and nov-decs [90].
  • Compound numbers are formed stating with the ten, linked with a hyphen to the unit (e.g.: dec-un [11], quinc-decs-sex [56]).
  • The word for hundred is cent [100].
  • The word for thousand is mill [1,000].
  • The word for million is million [1 million].

Write a number in full in Latinesce

Let’s move now to the practice of the numbering rules in Latinesce. Will you guess how to write a number in full? Enter a number and try to write it down in your head, or maybe on a piece of paper, before displaying the result.

Books

Histoire de la langue universelle Histoire de la langue universelle
by , editors Hachette livre-BNF (1903)
[Amazon.com Amazon.com]

Source

Auxiliary languages

Afrihili, Ba kom, Babm, Bolak, Ceqli, Digisk Folkspraak, Esperanto, Folkspraak, Globasa, Glosa, Guosa, Idiom neutral, Ido, Intal, Interlingua, Interlingue, Interslavic, Kotava, Langue nouvelle, Latinesce, Latino sine flexione, Lingua Franca Nova, Lingwa de planeta, Mondial, Mondlango, Neolatin, Nove Latina, Pandunia, Panglobish, Ro, Romanid, Slovio, Solresol, Sona, Spokil, Stœchiophonie, Tutonish, Universalglot, Uropi, and Volapük.

Other supported languages

As the other currently supported languages are too numerous to list extensively here, please select a language from the full list of supported languages.