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English numerals
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==Empty numbers== [[File:"Out of the Mud" flyer.jpg|thumb|"Out of the Mud" [[Flyer (pamphlet)|flyer]]]] Colloquial English's small vocabulary of empty or indefinite numbers can be employed when there is uncertainty as to the precise number to use, but it is desirable to define a general range: specifically, the terms "umpteen", "umpty", and "[[zillion]]". These are derived etymologically from the range affixes: * "-teen" (designating the range as being between 13 and 19 inclusive) * "-ty" (designating the range as being between 20 and 90 inclusive) * "-illion" (designating the range as being above 1,000,000; or, more generally, as being extremely large). The prefix "ump-" is added to the first two suffixes to produce the empty numbers "umpteen" and "umpty": derived from the [[onomatopoeic]] sound on the [[telegraph key]] used by Morse operators.<ref>''[[Chambers Dictionary|The Chambers English Dictionary]]'' [12th edition] p.1693</ref> A noticeable absence of an empty number is in the hundreds range. Usage of empty numbers: * The word "umpteen" may be used as an adjective, as in "I had to go to umpteen stores to find shoes that fit." It can also be used to modify a larger number, usually "million", as in "Umpteen million people watched the show; but they still cancelled it." * "Umpty" is not in common usage. It can appear in the form "umpty-one" (paralleling the usage in such numbers as "twenty-one"), as in "There are umpty-one ways to do it wrong." "Umpty-ump" is also heard, though "ump" is never used by itself. * The word "zillion" may be used as an adjective, modifying a noun. The noun phrase normally contains the indefinite article "a", as in "There must be a zillion pages on the World Wide Web." * The plural "zillions" designates a number indefinitely larger than "millions" or "billions". In this case, the construction is parallel to the one for "millions" or "billions", with the number used as a plural count noun, followed by a prepositional phrase with "of", as in "There are zillions of grains of sand on the beaches of the world." * Empty numbers are sometimes made up, with obvious meaning: "squillions" is obviously an empty, but very large, number; a "squintillionth" would be a very small number. * Some empty numbers may be modified by actual numbers, such as "four zillion", and are used for jest, exaggeration, or to relate abstractly to actual numbers. * Empty numbers are colloquial, and primarily used in oral speech or informal contexts. They are inappropriate in formal or scholarly usage. See also [[Placeholder name]].
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