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roman letter 4th in english

Kullanım:

Roman Numeral | Ordinal | English Translation

  • I. | primus (-a, -um) | first
  • II. | secundus, alter | second
  • III. | tertius | third
  • IV. | quartus | fourth
  • V. | quintus | fifth
  • VI. | sextus | sixth
  • VII. | septimus | seventh
  • VIII. | octavus | eighth
  • IX. | nonus | ninth
  • X. | decimus | tenth

Kaynak: thoughtco.com

Keywordler:

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  • ‘th’ in Roman numbers

Bulgular 1:

  • There isn’t a “th” in Roman numerals, and there isn’t a “th” in cardinal numbers either.
  • These are confusingly overlapping points. The “th” (or “st” or “nd” or…) marks the difference between ordinal and cardinal numbers (in English grammar, not the jargon use of “ordinal” and “cardinal” in mathematics). It is not used with Roman numerals. An important special case of this is that in English, unlike French, regnal numbers are ordinals (the exceptions in French are “Premier/Première” and, solely for the Holy Roman Emperor, “Charles Quint”). However, these are conventionally written in Roman numerals, which do not (in English) have a special ordinal form, nor do they take an article. Henry VIII is Henry the Eighth, and that’s how it’s pronounced.
  • //
  • I suppose not…Cardinal numbers are just the one, two, three, etc that we write and I do not suppose any of those to contain a ‘th’
  • //
  • In Roman numerals, the letters represent values, and there isn’t a specific ‘th’ suffix like in English ordinal numbers (e.g., 4th, 5th). Roman numerals use letters (I, V, X, L, C, D, M) to indicate both cardinal and ordinal numbers, but they are not typically combined with ‘th’ or other ordinal indicators.
  • Kaynak:

Bulgular 2:

  • Do not use ordinal forms (st, nd, th, etc.) with Roman numerals.
  • Kaynak: termiumplus.gc.ca

Bulgular 3: (Assume I have to use a Roman numeral to denote an ordinal number. Is it more correct to affix “-th” to it or not? That is, should I write “XIX century” or “XIXth century” to mean “nineteenth century”?)

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