Neivde: Difference between revisions
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# nine (9) | # nine (9) | ||
====Creation and Usage Notes==== | |||
{{djpnotes|quote=In the novel it appears as a part of the sentence: ''Naevʼde aen tvedeane, ellʼea?'', as a havekar's rough translation of "nine Orens for twelve"; tabletop RPG authors and subsequently the whole fandom took the whole ''naevʼde'' as the word for "nine" but I suspect that the ''de'' part is a preposition of some kind, with the word for "nine" being just ''naev''. | |||
-[[User:SMiki|SMiki]] ([[User talk:SMiki|talk]]) 11:49, 15 July 2024 (PDT) | |||
}} |
Revision as of 11:03, 15 July 2024
Hen Linge
Etymology
From an invisible proto-language. |
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The etymology of this word comes from an invisible proto-language. If you're confident you know the etymology, feel free to add it, but reader beware should the etymology be added by someone other than the creator of the language! |
Source
Coined by Andrzej Sapkowski in the book Baptism of Fire.
Source Spelling
naev'de
Pronunciation
Orthographic Form
naevde or naev'de
Orthographic Numeric Form
9
Numeral
neivde
- nine (9)
Creation and Usage Notes
In the novel it appears as a part of the sentence: Naevʼde aen tvedeane, ellʼea?, as a havekar's rough translation of "nine Orens for twelve"; tabletop RPG authors and subsequently the whole fandom took the whole naevʼde as the word for "nine" but I suspect that the de part is a preposition of some kind, with the word for "nine" being just naev. |