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Why isn’t the number 11 pronounced onety one?

 Why isn’t the number 11 pronounced onety one?
 Nein-Nein posted lebih dari setahun yang lalu
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HeitsiTsegin said:
I looked it up and found a web site ( link ) that had an answer.

For starters, there is no "onety" because it all BEGAN with a counting system based on "ten". The terms "twenty", "thirty" etc. are derived from compound words meaning "two tens", "three tens", etc. There was hardly a need to begin with a term meaning "one ten" when we already had the simple word "ten".

The pertanyaan then is why we have this odd system from eleven to nineteen. Actually, thirteen to nineteen aren't so odd, since they simply mean "three and ten", "four and teen", etc. The order may be different from "twenty three", but the principle is the same.

So, what of "eleven" and "twelve"? The first part isn't too hard. "Eleven" goes back to Middle English "en-leven", whose first syllable is a relative of "an/ane" meaning "one", and the "tw-" of "twelve" gives away its connection to "two". So we can sort of see that these two have something to do with the system of counting oleh ten. In fact, the original meaning of these two words was "one left" and "two left" (after counting to ten).

As for why "eleven" and "twelve" did not end up simply conforming to the "teen" pattern. Simple -- these were COMMON, well-established forms. And ordinarily in ANY language, it is precisely the common, everyday words that are LEAST likely to menyerahkan to "rules". (That's why the "irregular" past tense verb forms -- had, were, went, etc-- and irregular plural forms --men, mice, geese-- are almost always found with simple, common words.)

Of course, there were some alternative forms out there. We still use an alternative word for twelve -- "do-zen" itself shows us that (compare German "zehn")-- though it has gained its own special use (for a GROUPING of twelve). In fact, the fact that many things were divided into units of twelve also helps explain why eleven and twelve were treated differently.
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posted lebih dari setahun yang lalu 
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dude we want to know what anda think not what website says ............
Nein-Nein posted lebih dari setahun yang lalu
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anda asked a question, so I searched for the facts. This isn't an opinionated question, this is a pertanyaan with a solid answer that we can cari for. An example of an opinionated pertanyaan would be: "Do anda think there should be income tax?" a factual pertanyaan would be "Is there income tax." If anda wanted to say an opinionated question, anda should ask "do anda think we should call 11 onty-one?" Learn the difference.
HeitsiTsegin posted lebih dari setahun yang lalu
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That's very interesting, Heitsi.
XxTheBeatlesxX posted lebih dari setahun yang lalu
XxTheBeatlesxX said:
Probably because eleven sounds better?
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zanhar1 said:
Good question, onety one is a great number!
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laura199627 said:
IDK, It doesn´t sound good, eleven does.
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MallowMarsh said:
Because eleven takes less time to pronounce.
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ninjagirlz7 said:
Yes I'm smarter than a 5 grader.
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Bethanysuederou said:
anda have to be considered about other people. anda should always be nice and respectfull to others.
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ace2000 said:
K well I saw that giant answer up there gotten from a website and I thought, well, screw it, I'm going to write down what I thought when I saw this question.

English is Germanic in origin, which means that mostly all the really basic words we have are Teutonic (German-originating). I've taken German for like three years, so of course oleh now I know that "elf" is eleven in German, "zwölf" is twelve, and "dreizehn" through "neunzehn" is thirteen through nineteen. So yeah. I think probably since the Germans had an eleven and twelve like that, so do we.
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harambeunited said:
because I'm batman
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