Five
From open-dictionary.com - the free dictionary.
| Table of contents |
English
Etymology
Old English fíf, from Germanic *fimfi, from PIE *penkwe. Cognate to German fünf, French cinq, Greek πέντε, Russian пять.
Cardinal Number
five
- Arabic numerals: 5
- Arabic-Indic: ٥
- Chinese numerals: 五, 伍
- Roman numerals: V
- Two plus three. One plus four. The typical number of fingers on a hand, including the thumb. Ordinal: fifth.
Translations
- Albanian: pesë
- Arabic: خمسة (xamsa)
- Basque: bost
- Bosnian: pet
- Breton: pemp
- Catalan: cinc
- Chinese: 五 (wǔ)
- Corsican: cinqui
- Czech: pět
- Danish: fem
- Dutch: vijf
- Esperanto: kvin
- Estonian: viis
- Finnish: viisi (Suomi)
- French: cinq
- Frisian: fiif
- German: fünf
- Greek: πέντε (pende)
- Guarani: po
- Hebrew: חמש
- Hindi: पाँच
- Hungarian: öt
- Icelandic: fimm
- Ido: kin
- Indonesian: lima
- Interlingua: cinque
- Italian: cinque
- Japanese: 五 (ご, go), 五つ (いつつ, itsutsu)
- Kalaallisut: tallimat
- Korean: 다섯 (daseot), 오 [五] (o)
- Latin: quinque
- Lingua Franca Nova: sinco
- Lojban: mu
- Manchu: sunja
- Maricopa: sarapk
- Marshallese: ļalem
- Nahuatl: makwilli
- Norwegian: fem
- O'odham: hetasp
- Old English: fif
- Persian: پَنج (pænj)
- Polish: pięć
- Portuguese: cinco
- Romanian: cinci
- Romanica: cinque
- Russian: пять (pjatj)
- Slovio: piat
- Spanish: cinco
- Swedish: fem (Svenska)
- Filipino: lima
- Thai: ห้า
- Tok Pisin: faipela
- Toki Pona: luka
- Turkish: beş
- Yiddish: פֿינף (finf)
- Welsh: pump
Noun
five
1. The digit/figure 5
Translations
- Danish: femmer c
- Finnish: viitonen, vitonen
- Polish: piątka f
- Romanian: cinci m
- Swedish: femma