thre

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English

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Numeral

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thre

  1. Obsolete spelling of three.

Noun

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thre

  1. Obsolete spelling of three.

Anagrams

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Middle English

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Middle English numbers (edit)
30
[a], [b] ←  2 3 4  → 
    Cardinal: thre
    Ordinal: thridde
    Adverbial: thrie, thries
    Multiplier: threfold
    Distributive: threfold

Alternative forms

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Etymology

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From Old English þrīe, þrī, þrēo, from Proto-West Germanic *þrīʀ, from Proto-Germanic *þrīz, from Proto-Indo-European *tréyes.

Pronunciation

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Numeral

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thre

  1. three
    • c. 1225, “Introduction”, in Ancrene Ƿiſſe (MS. Corpus Christi 402)‎[1], Herefordshire, published c. 1235, folios 6, verso – 7, recto; republished at Cambridge: Parker Library on the Web, 2018 January:
      Almihti godd· feader· ſune· hali gaſt· aſ ȝe beoð ϸreo an godd: alſƿa ȝe beoð an mihte· an ƿiſdom· ⁊ an luue []
      Almighty God: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, as both three and one, while being one Might, one Wisdom, and one Love []
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Descendants

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  • English: three
  • Scots: three, threi, shrei, hrei
  • Yola: dhree, dhrie, dree

References

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Old Danish

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Etymology

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From Old Norse þrír.

Numeral

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thre

  1. three

Descendants

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Old Frisian

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Old Frisian cardinal numbers
 <  2 3 4  > 
    Cardinal : thrē

Etymology

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From Proto-West Germanic *þrīʀ. Cognates include Old English þrī and Old Saxon thrīe.

Pronunciation

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Numeral

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thrē m

  1. three

Declension

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Descendants

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References

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  • Bremmer, Rolf H. (2009) An Introduction to Old Frisian: History, Grammar, Reader, Glossary, Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company, →ISBN, page 68

Welsh

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Pronunciation

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Noun

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thre

  1. Aspirate mutation of tre.