nigonwintre

Old English

Old English numbers (edit)
90
 ←  8 9 10  → 
    Cardinal: nigon
    Ordinal: nigoþa
    Age: nigonwintre
    Multiplier: nigonfeald

Etymology

From Proto-Germanic *newunwintruz, though in the North Sea Germanic daughter languages, the word for "nine" somehow changed to *nigun. Equivalent to nigon +‎ -wintre.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈni.ɡonˌwin.tre/, [ˈni.ɣonˌwin.tre]

Adjective

nigonwintre

  1. nine year(s) old
    • late 9th century, translation of Orosius’ History Against the Pagans
      On þām ġewinne, ⁊ on moneġum oþrum æfter þǣm, Hannibal ġecȳþde þone nīþ ⁊ þone hete þe hē beforan his fæder ġeswōr, þā hē nigonwintre cniht wæs, þæt hē næfre ne wurde Rōmana frēond.
      In that battle, and in many others after that, Hannibal proved the hatred and hostility that he swore before his father when he was a nine-year-old boy, that he would never become a friend of the Romans.
  2. lasting nine years

Declension