- ün
- dọs
- trẹs
- quatre
- cinc
- sęis
- sęt
- uęg
- nǫu
- dętz
- ọnze
- dọtze
- trẹtze
- quatọrze
- quinze
- sętze, sędze
- dętz e sęt
- dętz e uęg
- dętz e nǫu
- vint, vin
- vint e ün
- vint e dọs
- trẹnta
- quaranta
- cinquanta
- sessanta
- setanta
- quatre vint
- nonanta
- cent, cen
- dozent
- tresent
- quatre cen
- cinc cens (de)
- mil
- dọs milia
- trẹs melia
- quatre mila
- cinc millięrs (de)
- cent miria
111. The first two numbers were inflected as follows:—
| ü(n)s üna | düi dọi | dọas dọs |
| ü(n) üna | dọs (düi) | dọas dọs |
Düi dọi are from Vulgar Latin dŭī = dŭo; dọs is from dŭos, dọas from dŭas. Trẹs has a form trẹi (originally nom. m.), patterned after düi, and a form trẹis, which seems to be a cross between trẹs and trẹi. For the dialect forms of ọnze—sętze, see § [76], (1), Ndc´, and § [80], Dc´. Cen, multiplied by another number, took a plural form when used substantively; when used adjectively, it generally did not, but we find dozentas with a feminine noun. Mil had four plurals, milia miria melia mila; millięrs is a noun.
1. As an example of a longer compound numeral, we have cen e quatre vint e ueg.
2. From ambo we have the obj. forms, m. and f., ams, ambas. Ambo combined with dŭī (dŭos dŭas), and perhaps influenced by Pr. ab (§ [65], P, 2), had this inflection:
| amdui | andui | abdui | ambedui | amdoas |
| amdos | andos | abdos | ambedos | amdoas |
112. The ordinal numerals had separate forms for the two genders; the masculine forms followed the second declension type, the feminine forms, the first declension. After 5th, they were made by adding to the cardinal numeral the originally distributive ending -ēnus -ēna.
- primięr, primięra
- segọn(t), segọnda
- tęrz, tęrza
- quart, quarta
- quint, quinta
- seizẹ(n), seizẹna
- setẹ(n), setẹna
- ochẹ(n), ochẹna
- novẹ(n), novẹna
- dezẹ(n), dezẹna
- onzẹ(n), onzẹna
- dozẹ(n), dozẹna
- vintẹ(n), vintẹna
- centẹ(n), centẹna
- milẹ(n), milẹna