sixty

English

English numbers (edit)
600
 ←  50  ←  59 60 61  →  70  → 
6
    Cardinal: sixty
    Ordinal: sixtieth
    Abbreviated ordinal: 60th
    Adverbial: sixty times
    Multiplier: sixtyfold
    Germanic collective: shock

Etymology

Inherited from Middle English sixty, sexty, Old English sixtiġ, from Proto-Germanic *sehs tigiwiz (sixty), equivalent to six +‎ -ty. Cognate with Scots sexty, saxty (sixty), Saterland Frisian säkstich (sixty), West Frisian sechstich (sixty), Dutch zestig (sixty), German Low German sesstig (sixty), German sechzig (sixty), Swedish sextio (sixty), Norwegian seksti (sixty), Icelandic sextíu (sixty). Compare also Sanskrit षष्टि (ṣaṣṭi).

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˈsɪksti/
  • (General American) enPR: sĭksʹtē, IPA(key): /ˈsɪksti/
  • Audio (US):(file)
  • Audio (UK):(file)
  • Rhymes: -ɪkstɪ, -ɪksti
  • Hyphenation: six‧ty

Numeral

sixty

  1. The cardinal number occurring after fifty-nine and before sixty-one, represented in Roman numerals as LX and in Arabic numerals as 60.
    Synonym: threescore (archaic)
    • 2005 August 21, Henry Alford, “Not a Word”, in The New Yorker[1], →ISSN, archived from the original on 9 March 2017:
      [] the remaining three hundred and sixty words were then vetted with a battery of references. Six potential Mountweazels emerged.

Derived terms

Translations

See also

Noun

sixty (plural sixties)

  1. (broadcasting) A commercial lasting 60 seconds.
    Coordinate term: thirty
    • 2014, Jules Witcover, No Way to Pick a President:
      [] instead of thirties [thirty-second commercials], they buy sixties, which cost twice as much. They spend more on filming it than they need to; they buy a lot of ads that are garbage and don't really say anything, just to fill up the space.

Anagrams

Hawaiian Creole

Etymology

Derived from English sixty.

Numeral

sixty

  1. sixty (the cardinal number occurring after fifty-nine and before sixty-one, represented in Roman numerals as LX and in Arabic numerals as 60)
    • 2000, “Matthew 13”, in Joseph Grimes, transl., Da Jesus Book: Hawaii Pidgin New Testament[2], Wycliffe Bible Translators, →ISBN, page 106:
      Some seed, dey make thirty times mo seed, some odda seed make sixty times mo seed, an odda even make hundred times mo seed.
      Still other seeds fell on good soil, and produced a harvest—some one hundred, some sixty, and some thirty times what had been planted.

Middle English

Middle English numbers (edit)
 ←  50 60 70  → 
6
    Cardinal: sixty
    Ordinal: sixtithe

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Old English sixtiġ, from Proto-Germanic *sehs tigiwiz; equivalent to six +‎ -ty.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈsikstiː/, /ˈsɛkstiː/

Numeral

sixty

  1. sixty (the cardinal number occurring after fifty-nine and before sixty-one, represented in Roman numerals as LX and in Arabic numerals as 60)

Descendants

  • English: sixty
  • Scots: sexty, saxty

References