þri
Old English
| 30 | ||
| ← 2 | 3 | 4 → |
|---|---|---|
| Cardinal: þrī Ordinal: þridda Adverbial: þreowa Age: þriwintre Multiplier: þrifeald | ||
Alternative forms
Etymology
From Proto-Germanic *þrīz, from Proto-Indo-European *tréyes.
Cognate with Old High German drī, French trois, Ancient Greek τρεῖς (treîs), Russian три (tri).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /θriː/
Numeral
þrī
- three
- late 9th century, translation of Bede's Ecclesiastical History
- Þonne is on ēasteweardre Cent myċel ēaland Tenet, þæt is syx hund hīda miċel æfter Angelcynnes ǣhte. Þæt ēalond tōsċēadeð Wantsumo strēam frām þām tōġeþeoddan lande. Sē is þreora furlunga brād: ⁊ on twām stōwum is oferfernes, ⁊ ǣġhwæþer ende līð on sǣ.
- Now to the east of Cent there is the great island of Thanet, which contains six hundred hides by the English manner of reckoning. The island separates the Wantsum Channel from the adjacent land. It is three furlongs wide; and it can be crossed in two places, and at each end flows into the sea.
- late 9th century, translation of Bede's Ecclesiastical History
Usage notes
- The distinction between masculine þrī and feminine/neuter þrēo, shown in the declension table below, existed only in the West Saxon dialect. In the other dialects þrēo was used for all three genders.
- The combining form (i.e., the form used as the first element of a compound) is þri-, with a short i: þrifeald (“triple”), þrimilċe (“May”), þrines (“trinity”), þriwintre (“three years old”). The word þrītiġ (“thirty”) is an exception, since it was originally a phrase meaning “three tens” and not a compound. See also twēġen, whose combining form is twi-.
Declension
Declension of þrī — Strong only
Derived terms
Descendants
Old Swedish
Numeral
þrī
- alternative form of þrīr