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单词 number
释义

numbern.

Brit. /ˈnʌmbə/, U.S. /ˈnəmbər/
Forms:

α. Middle English nobre (transmission error), Middle English noimbre, Middle English nombir, Middle English nombyre, Middle English nommbyre, Middle English nonbir, Middle English nonbr (transmission error), Middle English noubre (transmission error), Middle English noumbir, Middle English noumbur, Middle English nounbir, Middle English nounbre, Middle English nounbur, Middle English novmbre, Middle English nowmber, Middle English nowmbre, Middle English nowmbur, Middle English nowmbyre, Middle English nownbere, Middle English numbere, Middle English numbir, Middle English numbur, Middle English numbyr, Middle English nunbyr, Middle English–1500s nombar, Middle English–1500s nombre, Middle English–1500s nombyr, Middle English–1500s noumber, Middle English–1500s noumbre, Middle English–1500s numbre, Middle English–1500s (1700s English regional) nombur, Middle English–1600s nomber, Middle English– number, 1500s noombre, 1500s noumar, 1800s numbeh (U.S. regional); Scottish pre-1700 nimber, pre-1700 nombeir, pre-1700 nomber, pre-1700 nombir, pre-1700 nombre, pre-1700 nomebar, pre-1700 nomeber, pre-1700 nommber, pre-1700 noumber, pre-1700 noumbre, pre-1700 nowmber, pre-1700 nowmbyre, pre-1700 numbir, pre-1700 numbre, pre-1700 numbrie, pre-1700 numbyr, pre-1700 nummber, pre-1700 nwmber, pre-1700 1700s– number.

β. late Middle English nommer (chiefly northern), late Middle English noumer (chiefly northern), late Middle English nowmer (chiefly northern), late Middle English nowmyr (chiefly northern), late Middle English nummer (chiefly northern), late Middle English–1500s nowmere (chiefly northern), late Middle English–1500s nowmmer (chiefly northern); Scottish pre-1700 newmer, pre-1700 nomare, pre-1700 nomer, pre-1700 nomere, pre-1700 nomir, pre-1700 nommer, pre-1700 nomor, pre-1700 nomyr, pre-1700 noumer, pre-1700 nouwmyr, pre-1700 novmer, pre-1700 novmere, pre-1700 novmyr, pre-1700 nowmer, pre-1700 nowmere, pre-1700 nowmir, pre-1700 nowmyr, pre-1700 nowmyre, pre-1700 numeir, pre-1700 numere, pre-1700 numir, pre-1700 nummeir, pre-1700 nummir, pre-1700 nummyr, pre-1700 nvmer, pre-1700 nwmer, pre-1700 nwmyr, pre-1700 1800s numer, pre-1700 1800s– nummer.

Origin: A borrowing from French. Etymons: French nombre, numbre.
Etymology: < Anglo-Norman nombre, noumbre, numbre, nounbre, nunbre, numere and Old French, Middle French nombre sum, total (early 12th cent. as numbre), grammatical number (13th cent.), a (large, small) quantity (14th cent.), conformity in verse to a regular measure (1549) < classical Latin numerus sum, total, numeral, number as indicating a part or position in a series, a (large, small) quantity, a (large or small) group or collection of persons or things, a class or category, number as an abstract concept, the fact of being numerous, numerical calculation, arithmetic, rhythm in words or music, grammatical number, metrical foot, (plural) metrical lines, musical strains, perhaps < a suffixed ablaut variant of the same Indo-European base as ancient Greek νόμος (see nomos n.). Compare Middle Dutch nomber , nommer , nommere (Dutch nummer , (archaic) nommer ), German Nummer (16th cent.), Norwegian nummer , Swedish nummer , Danish nummer . Compare numero n.1, numéro n.2 and also No. n.2With sense 13b compare Old French Nombres (13th cent.), Anglo-Norman and Old French Livre des nombres (13th cent.), reflecting post-classical Latin Numeri and Libri numerorum (both Vulgate) respectively; the book was so called because it relates the census of the twelve tribes of Israel; compare Numery n. With senses 8, 9, and 10, compare Webster's Dict. Eng. Usage (1989) 673/2 which notes that a number is usually used with a plural verb and the number is usually used with a singular verb. When the word is preceded by an adjective, the verb is more frequently given as plural.
I. In senses relating to the result of enumeration, to quantity, etc.
1.
a. The precise sum or aggregate of a collection of individual things or persons; the quantity or amount.With of or other contextual indication of the group or type of individuals under consideration.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > number > enumeration, reckoning, or calculation > [noun] > result, sum > signal of
numberc1300
sum totalc1450
tally1886
the world > relative properties > number > enumeration, reckoning, or calculation > [noun] > result, sum > precise
numberc1300
α.
c1300 All Saints (Laud) 3 in C. Horstmann Early S.-Eng. Legendary (1887) 418 (MED) For þe grete noumbre þat of alle halewe is..euerech ne mai nouȝt at is feste ane day habbe.
c1325 (c1300) Chron. Robert of Gloucester (Calig.) 1397 As wel..Vor loue of þe panes as to wite þe noumbre of eche manne [v.rr. þe menne].
c1330 (?a1300) Arthour & Merlin (Auch.) (1973) 8252 (MED) So mani heþen þousinde, Þat þe noumbre y no can finde.
a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Douce 369(1)) (1850) Eccles. i. 15 Withoute ende is the noumbre of foolis.
c1400 (c1378) W. Langland Piers Plowman (Laud 581) (1869) B. xx. 254 In mesure god made alle manere þynges, And sette it at a certeyne and at a syker noumbre.
a1425 J. Wyclif Sel. Eng. Wks. (1871) II. 139 (MED) Þis noumbre of fishis..bitokeneþ þe noumbre of seintis.
1486 Bk. St. Albans sig. eij The moore nombur than ywis, the gretter the beuy is.
a1500 (?a1300) Arthour & Merlin (Douce) (1890) 679 (MED) Whanne Cryst hadde made þouȝt [read þourȝ] hys myȝt Heuene ful of angelis bryȝt, The nomber þat þare was þanne Noman for soþ telle can.
a1500 (?a1425) tr. Secreta Secret. (Lamb.) 60 (MED) He hauys ordeyned..alle þinges yn euyn weight and certeyn nombre and ordre.
1529 T. More Supplyc. Soulys i. f. xviiv He sayth yt then shall the nomber of sore and syke beggers decreace.
1554 D. Lindsay Dialog Experience & Courteour 3030 in Wks. (1931) I. 289 The noumber of this gret armie.
1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost iii. 706 What created mind can comprehend Thir number . View more context for this quotation
1709 G. Berkeley Ess. New Theory of Vision §61. 67 A Thing contains this or that Number of Inches.
1788 T. Jefferson Let. 4 Dec. in Papers (1958) XIV. 331 This is emploiment for near 2000 seamen, and puts nearly that number of British out of employ.
1797 R. Southey Lett. from Spain xxiv. 439 The number of fools is infinite.
a1822 P. B. Shelley tr. J. W. von Goethe Scenes from Faust in Posthumous Poems (1824) 415 Quite a new piece, the last of seven, for 'tis The custom now to represent that number.
1891 E. Peacock Narcissa Brendon I. 114 The number of books was very large.
1913 Sat. Evening Post (Philadelphia) 22 Feb. 3/1 Taft beat Roosevelt in the state by nearly fifty thousand; the Republican candidate for governor beat the Progressive by more than that number.
1950 D. Cusack 3 Austral. Three-act Plays iii. i. 238 I'm sure some people have more than the number of cups they pay for.
1994 Independent 1 Aug. 14/1 Since 1979, the number of women going back to full-time jobs after their babies are born has tripled.
β. ?a1425 Mandeville's Trav. (Egerton) (1889) 18 (MED) Þare was sum tyme fyue sowdanes, after þe noumer of þe fyue kyngdomes.a1450 in F. M. Comper Life of Richard Rolle (1928) 318 Þe nowmer of ihesu cristes wowndes ar fyve þowsandefoure hondreth sexty & fyftene, þi whilk in his body war felt & sene.c1450 (a1425) Metrical Paraphr. Old Test. (Selden) 11864 (MED) Þe paynyms com..with nowmmer mo þen men can neuyn.1458 in G. Neilson & H. Paton Acts Lords of Council Civil Causes (1918) II. p. xiv The nowmer of [lords of session] that sal sit salbe ix.a1522 G. Douglas tr. Virgil Æneid (1960) xi. vii. 77 Of thar schippis the nummeir and maner.1554 D. Lindsay Dialog Experience & Courteour 6229 in Wks. (1931) I. 382 Thow knew the nomer of predestinat, Quhome thow did call.1599 in D. M. Lyon Hist. Lodge Edinb. (1873) 39 The said Thomas Watt hes his full numer of prenteisses (to wit thrie).c1626 H. Bisset Rolment Courtis (1920) I. 15 Gif any gettis, the nowmer ar bot few.1627 in Rep. Parishes Scotl. (1835) 21 The numere of communicantis ane hundrethe or thairby.
b. In plural in same sense. Cf. sense 12c.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > number > plurality > great number, numerousness > [noun]
multitudec1350
numberc1390
pluralitya1398
manynessc1500
multitudine1547
umberment1550
infiniteness1579
numbers1591
populacy1597
plurity1600
numerosity1611
populosity1614
numerousness1631
populousness1651
multitudinousness1653
multitudinosity1840
1591 W. Garrard & R. Hitchcock Arte of Warre 224 So that helping your memorie with certain Tablei or Tariffas made of purpose to know the numbers of the souldiers that are to enter into ranke.
1600 W. Shakespeare Henry IV, Pt. 2 iv. i. 4 Send discouerers forth, To know the numbers of our enemies. View more context for this quotation
1613 in J. R. N. Macphail Highland Papers (1920) III. 131 Wherby the noumbers of men of warre..is particularlie sett downe.
a1719 J. Addison Wks. (1888) I. 493 There is but one gate for strangers to enter at, that it may be known what numbers of them are in the town.
1815 M. Elphinstone Acct. Kingdom Caubul iii. iv. 398 Their numbers are not less than thirty thousand families.
1874 A. Trollope Phineas Redux I. xvi. 129 The men may beat the women in numbers by ten to one.
1986 Bird Watching May 54/2 Greylag numbers were very low during March but pinkfeet more than made up for this with a count of 15,000 plus.
1996 Church Times 30 Aug. 3/3 Numbers were low this year, and this was never more apparent than at the mainstage gigs.
2.
a. Something which graphically or symbolically represents a numerical quantity, as a word, figure, or group of these; a numeral; (also) a ticket or label bearing such signs.to cast number: to perform arithmetical operations (obsolete).
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > number > mathematical number or quantity > [noun]
i-telc1000
telc1000
numberc1300
suma1387
quantitya1398
umberc1400
value1543
term1552
terminus?a1560
quantum1567
valuation1636
numerality1646
numeration1646
numerical1760
numeric1878
naturality1942
the world > relative properties > number > mathematical notation or symbol > [noun] > figure
rimeeOE
figure?c1225
numberc1300
digit?a1400
digitalc1450
cipher1530
term1552
terminus?a1560
significant figure1614
small figuresa1652
numeral1654
monasa1690
binary digit1796
nomial1828
supplement1868
c1300 St. Edmund Rich (Harl.) 226 in C. D'Evelyn & A. J. Mill S. Eng. Legendary (1956) 500 (MED) He..arsmetrike radde in cours in Oxenford wel faste & his figurs drouȝ aldai & his numbre caste.
c1300 St. Edmund Rich (Harl.) 228 in C. D'Evelyn & A. J. Mill S. Eng. Legendary (1956) 500 (MED) Arsmetrike is a lore þat of figurs al is, & of drauȝtes as me draweþ in poudre, & in numbre iwis.
c1392 Equatorie of Planetis 18 (MED) Mak yit a narwere cercle..in which shal ben writen the nombres of degres.
a1450 ( G. Chaucer Treat. Astrolabe i. §7. 7 Over the whiche degrees there ben noumbres of augrym that dividen thilke same degres fro 5 to 5.
1564–5 in J. Beveridge & G. Donaldson Reg. Secreti Sigilli Regum Scotorum (1957) V. i. 545/2 The samyn be at lenth writtin and insert thairin and nocht be nummer and figuris.
1728 E. Chambers Cycl. at Fraction Vulgar Fractions, called also Simple Fractions, are always express'd by two Numbers, the one wrote over the other, with a Line between them.
1788 S. Low Politician Out-witted v. iv. 63 The number on the door; why, that settles the matter at once,—there can't be two numbers alike, in the same street.
1836 C. Dickens Pickwick Papers (1837) ii. 5 A strange specimen of the human race..with a brass label and number round his neck.
1854 Orr's Circle Sci.: Math. Sci. 5 Figures thus have..a value depending upon the places they occupy in a number.
1864 J. Donaldson Crit. Hist. Christian Lit. & Doctr. I. 214 The appeal to the Greek letters as numbers, is conclusive proof of the writer's habitual use of the Greek Scriptures.
1912 D. Lowrie My Life in Prison iii. 30 I glanced at the number on the cell door. It was..34.
1948 Proc. Symp. Large-scale Digital Calculating Machinery 1947 47 The numbers representing the data are withdrawn from the tape to the table register.
1994 T. Clancy Debt of Honor Prol. 17 He looked at the number on the LCD display.
b. An abstract entity representing a quantity, used to express how many things are being referred to, or how much there is of some thing or property; an arithmetical value corresponding to a particular quantity of something. Also: an analogous entity or value used in mathematical operations without reference to actual things.In quot. 1532: a ratio, a proportion. See also sense 14b.atomic, Avogadro's, complex, quantum, whole number, etc.: see the first element.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > number > arithmetic or algebraic operations > [noun] > summing or addition > result of > sum-total
telc1000
numberc1390
sumc1400
summa totalis1423
summa1428
c1390 (?c1350) St. Augustine 88 in C. Horstmann Sammlung Altengl. Legenden (1878) 63 Of þe mesures of figures and musek And of alle þe noumbres ek..He vndersted.
a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add.) f. 326v Þe secounde odde noumbre [L. numerus impar], þat is, þe nombre of fyue.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) 419 Þat suld be of a numbre hale, and mani thusand to haue in tale.
a1450 York Plays (1885) 465 (MED) Parfite noumbre it is none Off elleuen.
a1500 in W. A. Pantin Eng. Black Monks (1931) I. 17 (MED) There ys a Numbyr that ys called a Grose, and itt cont[aineth] xij doss[en].
1532 (c1385) Usk's Test. Loue in Wks. G. Chaucer i. f. cccxxxiiii It is a fayre lykenesse, a pees or one grayne of wheate, to a thousande shippes ful of corne charged. What nombre is betwene the one and thother.
1570 H. Billingsley tr. Euclid Elements Geom. vii. f. 186 When two numbers multiplying them selues..produce an other: the number produced is called a plaine or superficiall number.
1602 W. Shakespeare Merry Wives of Windsor v. i. 2 They say there is good luck in old numbers.
1608 D. Tuvill Ess. Politicke, & Morall f. 46 Themselues alone will be thought the Numbers, that giue a substantiall existence to the being of them all.
1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost viii. 114 Distance inexpressible By Numbers that have name. View more context for this quotation
1753 Chambers's Cycl. Suppl. App. (at cited word) The figurate Numbers of any order may be found without computing those of the preceding orders.
1820 P. B. Shelley Œdipus Tyrannus i. 14 If you were to dream Of a particular number in the Lottery, You would not buy the ticket?
1859 B. Smith Arith. & Algebra (ed. 6) 35 A Mixed Number is composed of a whole number and a fraction.
1935 Proc. Amer. Soc. Testing Materials 35 342 The cetane number..is determined and expressed..as the percentage of cetane in a blend of cetane and alphamethylnaphthalene.
1981 P. Davies Edge of Infinity (1983) ii. 31 It has been known since the time of Pythagoras that there exist numbers that cannot be expressed as either a whole number or as a fraction.
1990 Glasgow Math. Jrnl. 32 285 We shall therefore call an even number a Goldbach number if it can be written as the sum of two primes in at least one way.
c. (a) In plural. Arithmetic; †an arithmetic calculation (obsolete); (b) in singular (elementary) arithmetic, esp. as taught as a school subject (originally Australian and New Zealand, now also British).The modern use of the singular, referring esp. to primary school arithmetic, may have been influenced by the title of the textbook referred to in quot. 1922.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > number > arithmetic > [noun]
arithmeticc1305
numbera1398
calking1398
arsmetryc1454
arith.1600
ciphering1611
epilogisma1646
logistic1656
tale-craft1674
denumeration1851
sums1877
arithmic1879
Peano arithmetic1903
a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add.) f. 328a/a Among þe science mathematicus, wise men schal most take heede of þe science of nombres.
c1400 (c1378) W. Langland Piers Plowman (Laud 581) (1869) B. xix. 234 (MED) He tauȝte..some to dyuyne and diuide, noumbres to kenne.
a1450 ( G. Chaucer Treat. Astrolabe Prol. 3 I aperceyve wel by certeyne evydences thyn abilite to lerne sciences touching nombres and proporciouns.
c1475 Court of Sapience (Trin. Cambr.) (1927) 1974 (MED) Apuleyus and Boece..were the furst in latyne and in grew, That in to the craft on nombre euer drew.
1693 S. Pepys Let. to Newton 22 Nov. The late project..has almost extinguished..at all places of public conversation in this town, especially among men of numbers, every other talk.
1711 R. Steele Spectator No. 174. ⁋5 None of all these Things could be done by him without the Exercise of his Skill in Numbers.
1791 J. Boswell Life Johnson anno 1776 II. 21 [Johnson:] We may instance the science of numbers, which all minds are equally capable of attaining.
1848 E. C. Gaskell Mary Barton I. viii. 128 I've gotten no head for numbers.
1872 H. W. Longfellow Poet. Wks. IV. 202 Thus he grew up,..Perfect in Grammar, and in Rhetoric nice; Science of Numbers, Geometric art, And lore of Stars, and Music knew by heart.
1922 N.Z. Educ. Gaz. 1 Dec. 137/1 Miss Caldwell has published a book entitled ‘The Simplicity of Number’, a copy of which..can..be obtained from her by teachers.
1963 B. Pearson Coal Flat iv. 63 You'd best make sure of his reading and his number and see if he's good enough for this class.
1996 Independent 2 May ii. 16/4 To teach basic language and number.
1997 R. Coles Moral Intelligence of Children i. iv. 35 Elaine had already told her teacher that she hoped one day to be a stockbroker, like her grandfather: ‘He is a whiz at numbers’—a remark she'd heard her grandmother make all the time.
d. line of numbers = Gunter's line at Gunter n. 1a. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > number > mathematical notation or symbol > [noun] > figure > groupings of figures > column of figures
pillar1557
line of numbers1656
1656 J. Brown Descr. Carpenters-rule (title) The description and use of the carpenters-rule: together with the use of the line of numbers (inscribed thereon) in arithmatick and geometry. And the application thereof to the measuring of all superficies and solids.
1667 W. Leybourn (title) The line of proportion or numbers, commonly called Gunters Line, made easie. By the which may be measured all manner of superficies and solids.
1706 Phillips's New World of Words (new ed.) Gunter's Line, the common Line of Numbers first invented by Mr. Edmund Gunter, and so well known that it needs no Description.
1728 E. Chambers Cycl. at Gunter's Line Call'd also Line of Lines, and Line of Numbers.
1828 Moore's Pract. Navigator (ed. 20) 91 The diff. of long. 419 on the line of numbers.
1890 Dict. National Biogr. XXXIII. 350 Gunter's admirable rule of proportion, now called the line of numbers (‘Gunter's Line’ and ‘Gunter's Proportion’).
e. In plural. U.S. slang. An illegal form of gambling in which bets are taken on the occurrence of numbers in a lottery or in the financial columns of a newspaper. Esp. in to play the numbers. Cf. policy n.2 1c.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > betting > betting on lotteries > [noun]
policy business1804
policy1879
numbers1897
numbers game1935
numbers drop1968
1868 J. D. McCabe Secrets Great City 514 A man might play three numbers every day for a year, and not have the satisfaction of seeing all three come out at one time on the drawing.]
1897 G. Ade Pink Marsh 170 She tell Belle 'at she heah I like gin an' roll'e bones an' play numbehs.
1926 C. Van Vechten Nigger Heaven 286 Numbers, a gambling game highly popular in contemporary Harlem. The winning numbers each day are derived from the New York Clearing House bank exchanges and balances..published in the newspapers.
1965 Malcolm X Autobiogr. 52 Betting my dollar a day on the numbers.
1975 New Yorker 29 Sept. 54/3 She had met Delgado while she was selling numbers on the streets of the lower East Side.
1992 D. Pinckney High Cotton vi. 145 His part-time helper..lost vast sums..playing the numbers.
f. In plural. colloquial. Statistics; (U.S. Sport, esp. Baseball) statistics detailing a player's performance in various aspects of his or her sport.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > number > probability or statistics > [noun] > statistics
statistics1800
stat1952
stats1962
numbers1964
1964 N.Y. Times 11 Apr. 20 Such numbers show graphically how evenly playing time has been distributed.
1973 Black Panther 7 Apr. (Suppl.) c/2 There is an old saying that is particularly appropriate: ‘Numbers don't lie’.
1986 R. L. Chapman New Dict. Amer. Slang 298/1 He had 40 homers and a 325 average, the best numbers on the team.
1991 Athlon's Eastern Football Ann. 60/2 Nance let Klingler's numbers speak for themselves,..pointing out that Klingler's statistics were better than any other Heisman-winning quarterback.
1994 City Paper (Philadelphia) 18 Mar. 8/5 According to the numbers, about 60,000 Philadelphians currently receiving welfare payments will have their payments reduced to the 70-cents-a-day level.
3.
a. An arithmetical value assigned to something or someone, esp. to indicate position in a series, or for purposes of reference, identification, etc. the number of the beast: the number 666, numerologically representing the (unidentified) name of the Antichrist of the book of Revelation; also used allusively.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > indication > marking > marking to identify > mark of identification > [noun] > number
numberc1350
reference number1730
serial number1838
code number1862
key code1941
the world > relative properties > number > mathematical number or quantity > numerical arrangement > [noun] > set > sequence > series > designating place in
numberc1350
extreme1571
numero1649
infinitesimal1655
No.1753
Z1842
majorant1925
seed1972
c1350 Apocalypse St. John: A Version (Harl. 874) (1961) 105 (MED) His noumbre it is sex hundreþ & sexty & sex.
c1384 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Royal) Apoc. xiii. 18 Heere is wisdom; he that hath vndirstonding, acounte the noumbre of the beest; sotheli the noumbre of man is, and his noumbre is sixe hundrid sixty and sixe.
1621 R. Montagu Diatribæ Hist. Tithes 293 Those men who propound..their priuate, probable and problematical opinions,..of the Number of the Beast.
1634 in B. Cusack Everyday Eng. 1500–1700 (1998) 139 He sawe a nomber of lx persons gathered togeither.
1697 H. Wanley in Bodleian Q. Rec. (1915) 1 107 That a little strip of Parchment be pasted to each Tract, with its number written upon it.
1830 F. Marryat King's Own II. xix. 293 A strange sail, who had not..shewn her number.
1836 C. Dickens Pickwick Papers (1837) ii. 6 Would any body believe as an informer 'ud go about in a man's cab, not only takin' down his number, but ev'ry word he says into the bargain.
1898 G. B. Shaw Philanderer in Plays Unpleasant iii. 135 Julia..What is Dr Paramore's number in Savile Row? Charteris. Seventy-nine.
1908 E. F. Benson Blotting Bk. i. 16 I saw one policeman trying to take my number.
1987 B. Moore Colour of Blood xv. 97 You will say that you came for the VD clinic and you will be given a number.
1992 I. Banks Crow Road xii. 286 ‘Did you know... In the Dewey Decimal System, glass-making comes under the code six six six?’ ‘Woo,’ Rory whistled. ‘Number of the beast! Spooky, eh?’
b. A number assigned to a particular telephone (or group of telephones) and used in making connections to it; = telephone number n. at telephone n. Compounds 3.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > telecommunication > telegraphy or telephony > telephony > [noun] > number
number1879
telephone number1880
home number1898
phone number1911
silent number1913
wrong number1930
4111931
9991937
area code1946
9111968
800 number1971
cell number1988
0800 number1988
digit1989
1879 Times 8 Sept. 12/1 The person at No. 2 calls the attention of the attendant at the exchange by means of an electric bell. At the same moment a shutter on the switchboard falls and discloses the number of the applicant.
1884 List of Subscribers (London & Globe Telephone Co.) 4 Take telephones from hooks and speak at once, giving number of subscriber wanted.
1911 W. J. Locke Glory of Clementina Wing 324 She..took up the telephone and gave a number.
1965 Mrs. L. B. Johnson White House Diary 3 June (1970) 283 I tried to reach him, or rather his wife, to no avail. The number didn't answer.
1973 ‘R. Lewis’ Blood Money iv. 47 ‘Could it be the number of the hire-car he used?’..‘It's a Leeds number.’
1991 R. Rendell Kissing Gunner's Daughter (1992) xxii. 278 Only the answering machine replied when he dialled her number.
c. = denier n.3 4. Cf. count n.1 2b.
ΘΚΠ
the world > textiles and clothing > textiles > thread or yarn > [noun] > standard of fineness of
count1877
number1923
yarn count1923
1923 G. G. Denny Fabrics i. 31 Yarn count—a number given to yarn indicating its fineness, based upon number of yards per pound, more correctly called ‘yarn number’.
1927 M. H. Avram Rayon Industry 516 There are many systems by which the ‘number’, ‘size’, or ‘count’ of yarns is expressed.
1928 V. Hottenroth Artific. Silk ix. 160 Before the silk is ready for sale or for treatment in the dye works, it must be sorted according to quality and number (that is, thickness of thread).
1931 D. L. Pellatt Viscose Rayon Production xi. 97 For 150-denier yarn..the number has risen from 18 to 21, 24, 27.
1969 W. von Bergen et al. Wool Handbk. (ed. 3) II. ii. xvi. 1133 Yarn number is defined as the linear density of a textile strand.
4.
a. A single part or issue of a magazine or periodical, etc.; each of the separate parts of any book or other publication issued in serial form. in numbers: in a series of separate parts published at intervals.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > printing > publishing > [adverb] > in serial form
in numbers1728
serially1844
society > communication > book > series or set > [noun] > part of
part1424
volume1523
fascicle1647
pt.1654
number1728
livraison1784
fasciculus1845
fascicule1880
heft1886
1728 Stamford Mercury 28 Mar. 104/2 The whole Work will make about ten Numbers, containing fifteen Sheets each Number, beautifully printed in 4+₀, Price 3s. 10. to be continued Monthly.
1742 H. Fielding Joseph Andrews I. ii. i. 135 He was the first Inventor of the Art which so long lay dormant, of publishing by Numbers, an Art now brought to such Perfection, that even Dictionaries are divided and exhibited piece-meal to the Public. View more context for this quotation
1795 Gentleman's Mag. 65 540/1 A good-natured friend, who shewed me the last number of the Critical Review.
1851 H. Mayhew London Labour I. 290/1 He used to buy up all the old back numbers of the cheap periodicals.
1853 E. C. Gaskell Cranford i I consider it vulgar, and below the dignity of literature, to publish in numbers.
1884 Athenæum Dec. 773 In our number for December 27th we shall give a series of articles on the Continental Literature of the Year.
1938 Open Road for Boys July 8/1 You'll recall that in the June number, he explained to us the fundamental tennis strokes.
1969 I. Berlin Four Ess. Liberty Introd. p. ix The first of the four essays in this book appeared in the mid-century number of the New York periodical Foreign Affairs.
1987 C. Tomalin Katharine Mansfield vii. 84 He and Jackson issued their first number of a magazine they had persuaded Bernard Shaw to help them acquire.
b. Each of a collection of songs or poems. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > literature > poetry > poem or piece of poetry > [noun] > one of a collection of poems
number1842
society > leisure > the arts > music > type of music > vocal music > a song > [noun] > one of a collection
number1878
1842 Southern Literary Messenger Feb. 167 We are under no small obligation to Longfellow for embodying so many cheering views of existence in such musical numbers.
1878 R. L. Stevenson Inland Voy. 119 There was a number in the hawker's collection called Conscrits Français, which may rank among the most dissuasive war-lyrics on record.
1894 Westm. Gaz. 21 Feb. 3/1 There are only 28 numbers in the little book, but none of them is quite insignificant, while many contain really memorable lines and stanzas.
c. A person designated by a certain number. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > language > naming > [noun] > one who is designated by a number
number1859
1859 F. A. Griffiths Artillerist's Man. (1862) 196 The first seven numbers run up.
c1860 H. Stuart Novices or Young Seaman's Catech. (rev. ed.) 14 Order any two numbers to draw it out.
d. colloquial. A bedroom in a hotel. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabited place > a building > parts of building > room > room by type of use > [noun] > bedroom > other
family room1873
number1902
double room1931
1902 Chambers's Jrnl. Nov. 717/1 The ordinary sojourner, at a strange hotel will..ask to be accommodated with a ‘bed’ that night; the bagman expresses his desire for a ‘number’.
5.
a. An item in a programme of (musical) entertainment; (sometimes) spec. each more or less distinct section of an opera, oratorio, etc. Also (more generally): any song or tune.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > music > piece of music > [noun]
workOE
musica1586
composure?1606
composition1667
writings1672
morceau1748
op.1784
piece1825
opusc1840
confection1844
number1865
oeuvre1889
society > leisure > the arts > music > type of music > vocal music > opera > [noun] > part of opera
scena1788
number1865
finale1866
1865 tr. L. Spohr Autobiogr. I. 72 I now expected that..all those ‘Numbers’ in which Titus has to sing, would be omitted.
1874 Catholic World Sept. 787 The director of the music should..sacrifice even the most admirable musical numbers to the exigencies of the ceremonial.
1891 Guardian 23 Sept. 1531 The names of the singers of all the solo numbers.
1900 E. E. Peake Darlingtons i. 2 After a rattling number by the band, a brief address by the Mayor, and another rattling number by the band, a neatly dressed, handsome man..advanced to the front of the platform.
1908 L. M. Montgomery Anne of Green Gables xix. 214 Only one number on the programme failed to interest her.
1920 P. G. Wodehouse Little Warrior xi. 199 He's put over any amount of shows which would have flopped like dogs without him to stage the numbers.
1948 Penguin Music Mag. Feb. 25 The B.B.C. could start..by putting some kind of check on the manner and matter of their inane songs—‘numbers’ I think they call them.
1984 A. Copland & V. Perlis Copland: 1900–42 x. 261 The music is divided into ten ‘numbers’, with the spoken scenes taking away the necessity for recitative.
2001 Vanity Fair (N.Y.) May 218/2 Some of the first songs Dylan wrote himself—a handful of Guthrie-style ‘talking blues’ numbers and the poignant ballad ‘Song to Woody’.
b. Chiefly with modifying word: (a part of) a theatrical or other performance; a routine, a turn.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > [noun] > a performance > item in
turn1715
act1828
routine1866
number1908
shtick1948
1908 K. McGaffey Sorrows of Show Girl ii. 30 I've got to roll my hoop and do a shopping number.
1939 J. B. Priestley Johnson over Jordan 67 And now, friends, a new novelty act, the first time here, and I know it will be a socko number.
1958 B. Nichols Sweet & Twenties 141 Those most precious of all items to the revue writer, the ‘front-cloth numbers’, which can be played without props or scenery.
1977 New Yorker 17 Oct. 40 I did a bag-lady number on one of the platforms here in the bus station last year, and I almost got arrested. They thought I was the real thing.
6. colloquial. A person or thing.
a. An article of clothing.
ΘΚΠ
the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > [noun] > garment or article of
raileOE
i-wedeOE
reafOE
shroudc1000
weedOE
back-cloth?c1225
hatter?c1225
clouta1300
coverturec1300
garment1340
vesturec1384
clothc1385
vestmentc1386
jeryne?a1400
clothinga1425
gilla1438
raiment1440
haterella1450
vestimenta1500
indumenta1513
paitclaith1550
casceis1578
attire1587
amice1600
implements1601
cladment1647
enduement1650
vest1655
body garment1688
wearable1711
sledo1719
rag1855
number1894
opaque1903
daytimer1936
1894 E. Œ. Somerville & ‘M. Ross’ Real Charlotte I. iii. 22 The shop windows..had progressed..to straw hats, tennis shoes, and coloured Summer Numbers.
1935 Ladies' Home Jrnl. Apr. 19/3 Deedee had swathed herself in an afternoon number and was happily emptying the last of my..perfume down her front.
1953 M. Steen Anna Fitzalan viii. 211 Petula Wimbleby's solution turned out to be an exquisite but throat-high ‘little number’ redeemed by lumps of jade.
1992 More 28 Oct. 51/1 He'd actually buy her hot-to-trot underwear and little red Lycra numbers with plunging necklines.
b. A person, esp. a girl or young woman. Frequently with modifying word. Also: spec. a sexual partner.
ΘΚΠ
the world > people > person > [noun]
hadc900
lifesmaneOE
maneOE
world-maneOE
ghostOE
wyeOE
lifeOE
son of manOE
wightc1175
soulc1180
earthmanc1225
foodc1225
person?c1225
creaturec1300
bodyc1325
beera1382
poppetc1390
flippera1400
wat1399
corsec1400
mortal?a1425
deadly?c1450
hec1450
personagec1485
wretcha1500
human1509
mundane1509
member1525
worma1556
homo1561
piece of flesh1567
sconce1567
squirrel?1567
fellow creature1572
Adamite1581
bloat herringa1586
earthling1593
mother's child1594
stuff1598
a piece of flesh1600
wagtail1607
bosom1608
fragment1609
boots1623
tick1631
worthy1649
earthlies1651
snap1653
pippin1665
being1666
personal1678
personality1678
sooterkin1680
party1686
worldling1687
human being1694
water-wagtail1694
noddle1705
human subject1712
piece of work1713
somebody1724
terrestrial1726
anybody1733
individual1742
character1773
cuss1775
jig1781
thingy1787
bod1788
curse1790
his nabs1790
article1796
Earthite1814
critter1815
potato1815
personeityc1816
nibs1821
somebody1826
tellurian1828
case1832
tangata1840
prawn1845
nigger1848
nut1856
Snooks1860
mug1865
outfit1867
to deliver the goods1870
hairpin1879
baby1880
possum1894
hot tamale1895
babe1900
jobbie1902
virile1903
cup of tea1908
skin1914
pisser1918
number1919
job1927
apple1928
mush1936
face1944
jong1956
naked ape1965
oke1970
punter1975
the world > people > person > woman > [noun]
wifeeOE
womaneOE
womanOE
queanOE
brideOE
viragoc1000
to wifeOE
burdc1225
ladyc1225
carlinec1375
stotc1386
marec1387
pigsneyc1390
fellowa1393
piecec1400
femalea1425
goddessa1450
fairc1450
womankindc1450
fellowessa1500
femininea1513
tega1529
sister?1532
minikinc1540
wyec1540
placket1547
pig's eye1553
hen?1555
ware1558
pussy?a1560
jade1560
feme1566
gentlewoman1567
mort1567
pinnacea1568
jug1569
rowen1575
tarleather1575
mumps1576
skirt1578
piga1586
rib?1590
puppy1592
smock1592
maness1594
sloy1596
Madonna1602
moll1604
periwinkle1604
Partlet1607
rib of man1609
womanship?1609
modicum1611
Gypsy1612
petticoata1616
runniona1616
birda1627
lucky1629
she-man1640
her1646
lost rib1647
uptails1671
cow1696
tittup1696
cummer17..
wife1702
she-woman1703
person1704
molly1706
fusby1707
goody1708
riding hood1718
birdie1720
faggot1722
piece of goods1727
woman body1771
she-male1776
biddy1785
bitch1785
covess1789
gin1790
pintail1792
buer1807
femme1814
bibi1816
Judy1819
a bit (also bundle) of muslin1823
wifie1823
craft1829
shickster?1834
heifer1835
mot1837
tit1837
Sitt1838
strap1842
hay-bag1851
bint1855
popsy1855
tart1864
woman's woman1868
to deliver the goods1870
chapess1871
Dona1874
girl1878
ladykind1878
mivvy1881
dudess1883
dudette1883
dudine1883
tid1888
totty1890
tootsy1895
floozy1899
dame1902
jane1906
Tom1906
frail1908
bit of stuff1909
quim1909
babe1911
broad1914
muff1914
manhole1916
number1919
rossie1922
bit1923
man's woman1928
scupper1935
split1935
rye mort1936
totsy1938
leg1939
skinny1941
Richard1950
potato1957
scow1960
wimmin1975
womyn1975
womxn1991
1919 Dial. Notes 5 70 Hot one, hot number, used as a term of disgust. ‘You're a hot one I must say.’ New Mexico.
1936 L. C. Douglas White Banners xvi. 343 She's an odd number... I rather fancy she wears a hair shirt herself.
1955 W. Gaddis Recognitions ii. vii. 627 Have you seen a little blond number named Adeline?
1968 J. Sangster Touchfeather ii. 17 I make do with three [men]..my home number is just a nice guy who sells motor cars.
1973 Amer. Speech 1970 55 58 Number, casual pick-up from a bar or the street.
1994 N.Y. Rev. Bks. 17 Feb. 18/2 They are bad numbers who brutally slaughtered a young woman and a young man in a robbery.
c. A job, assignment, or activity. Frequently in cushy number.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > position or job > [noun]
steadc1000
noteOE
officec1300
ministry?a1475
rooma1485
placea1500
roomth1544
place1558
post1562
berth1720
situation1766
job1781
sit1853
spot1859
billet1870
engagement1884
shop1885
gig1908
lurk1916
possie1916
number1928
site1930
sits vac1945
hat1966
society > occupation and work > duties > [noun] > piece of work or task
workOE
notec1400
turnc1480
piece of work1533
job1557
employment1579
task1597
spot of work1689
day job1798
number1928
1928 G. Campbell My Myst. Ships xii. 226 It may appear that the men in the boats had a fairly ‘quiet’ number, after they had merely run the risk of being torpedoed.
1959 N.Z. Listener 24 July 5/1 A navigator's yeoman who had the cushy number of rubbing out old minefields and putting in new ones.
1975 J. Wainwright Square Dance 187 He silently congratulated himself. It was a soft number, sitting here.
2000 Independent 13 Mar. 11/1 The Caribbean posting is not a cushy number.
d. slang (originally and chiefly U.S.). A marijuana cigarette; an amount of marijuana obtained from a dealer.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > use of drugs and poison > an intoxicating drug > [noun] > a) narcotic drug(s) > marijuana or cannabis > cigarette
weed1917
stick1918
spliff1929
weed1929
reefer1931
joint1935
muggler1935
ju-ju1940
mezzroll1944
panatela1946
bomber1952
charge1957
bomb1960
number1963
doobie1967
smoke1967
cheeba1971
Thai stick1976
blunt1988
bifter1989
1963 in E. L. Abel Marihuana Dict. (at cited word) You smoke this number while I go and call John.
1965 W. King in Liberator Aug. 22 ‘Mac's copping me a number from hell for a nickel!’.. ‘Sweet Mac was supposed to cop me a bag three nights back... I'm waiting here tonight to get my bag of reefer.’
1981 R. Carver Cathedral in C. M. Curtis Amer. Stories from Atlantic (1990) 144 I passed her the number. She took it and inhaled and then passed it back to me.
1995 Independent 27 Apr. 22/7 After a few tokes of Aunt Mary, maths would be a bust with kids who think a number is something you roll.
7. colloquial. Used generally (and frequently humorously) to refer to any person or thing (identified more precisely by context). Frequently in little number.
ΚΠ
1903 A. H. Lewis Boss 205 That's a nice number to hand a man!
1938 Amer. Home June 26/1 There is the little number of wood or metal and canvas known as a ‘director's chair’.
1959 F. Astaire Steps in Time 275 I got my fill a few days later, however, when a lone putt-putt German raided our orchard home and dropped a few little numbers just a hundred yards away.
1987 Super Bike June 67/3 A successful neo-classic touch is the use of wire wheels rather than the road bike's cast numbers, which probably also saves some useful weight.
1999 Wired Feb. 53/2 This little number has the largest optical zoom available.
II. Senses relating to the aggregate of things enumerated or collected together.
8.
a. The full count of a collection or company of persons. Also in plural. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
c1350 Apocalypse St. John: A Version (Harl. 874) (1961) 49 (MED) Þai shulden resten hem..vntil þe noumbre be fulfild of her breþeren.
a1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis (Fairf.) viii. 32 (MED) The nombre of Angles which was lore..He thoghte to restore.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) 9416 Þat þis oxspring war o þat tale Þat moght fulfill þe numbre hale..o þam þat fell.
a1425 J. Wyclif Sel. Eng. Wks. (1869) I. 6 Þe noumbre of men þat God haþ ordeyned to blisse mut nedis be fillid.
1483 in Cal. Anc. Rec. Dublin (1889) I. 364 Suche persones as they thynkith lyable to fullfill the nombre of the xlviii. demi jurees.
c1520 M. Nisbet New Test. in Scots (1905) III. Prol. to Acts 2 The novmer of the apostilis war fulfillit.
1569–70 in J. Stuart Extracts Council Reg. Aberdeen (1844) I. 367 Ane buik contening the haill numer of personis of thair delatioun.
1600 W. Shakespeare Henry IV, Pt. 2 iii. ii. 185 Here is two more cald then your number, you must haue but foure here sir. View more context for this quotation
1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost iii. 332 Hell, her numbers full, Thenceforth shall be for ever shut. View more context for this quotation
1859 Ld. Tennyson Guinevere in Idylls of King 251 How sad it were for Arthur..To..miss the wonted number of my knights.
b. A particular body or company of persons or things. Now only in constructions denoting inclusion, as of (also in, etc.) the number (of).
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > relative position > arrangement or fact of being arranged > state of being gathered together > an assemblage or collection > [noun] > of people or animals > regarded as a whole or a body of people gathered
weredc725
trumec893
thrumOE
wharfOE
flockOE
farec1275
lithc1275
ferd1297
companyc1300
flotec1300
routc1300
rowc1300
turbc1330
body1340
numberc1350
congregation1382
presencec1390
meiniec1400
storec1400
sum1400
manya1425
collegec1430
peoplec1449
schoola1450
turm1483
catervea1492
garrison?a1513
shoal1579
troop1584
bevy1604
roast1608
horde1613
gross1617
rhapsody1654
sortment1710
tribe1715
c1350 Psalter (BL Add. 17376) in K. D. Bülbring Earliest Compl. Eng. Prose Psalter (1891) 192 (MED) Þe praiseable numbre of prophetes herieþ þe.
c1390 G. Chaucer Melibeus 2710 I am nat of the nombre of right parfite men.
a1400 (a1325) Cursor Mundi (Vesp.) 23875 (MED) He has us in his numbur tald, Als his scepe of his aun fald.
a1425 Rule St. Benet (Lansd.) (1902) 1 (MED) He..hase vochyd safe to cownte vs in þe nummer of hys sons.
1485 W. Caxton in Malory's Morte Darthur Pref. sig. ij Admytted..in to the nombre of the ix beste & worthy, of whome was fyrst the noble Arthur.
a1500 tr. A. Chartier Quadrilogue (Rawl.) (1974) 228 (MED) He was betin with roddis and aftir that put to the fotemen as oon of their numbur.
a1538 A. Abell Roit or Quheill of Tyme f. 51, in Dict. Older Sc. Tongue at Noumer Sum puttis him nocht in nowmir of papis.
?a1562 G. Cavendish Life Wolsey (1959) 51 The kyng..hauyng abought his person..beside the wonderfull nomber of nobyll men & gentilmen iijre great Gardes.
1611 Bible (King James) 2 Cor. x. 12 For we dare not make our selues of the number . View more context for this quotation
c1626 H. Bisset Rolment Courtis (1920) I. 201 The lordis appovntis uthir foure of there numer to succeid..quhill the course cum about the [haill] numer.
1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost v. 843 But more illustrious made, since he the Head One of our number thus reduc't becomes. View more context for this quotation
1754 Earl of Chatham Lett. to Nephew (1804) iv. 25 Is gratitude in the number of a man's virtues?
1785 T. Jefferson Let. 1 Sept. in Papers (1953) VIII. 460 The Emperior continues to give proofs of his desire..of receiving us into the number of his tributaries.
1852 W. E. Gladstone Exam. Reply Neapolitan Govt. 25 They would..rank as enemies of order, and be added to the number of those who are the unfortunate subjects of the return.
1874 A. Trollope Phineas Redux II. xxviii. 225 They would have a few friends with them, and Madame Goesler would be one of the number.
1917 E. Wharton Summer xv. 234 She had seen too many village love-stories end in that way. Poor Rose Coles's miserable marriage was of the number.
1961 K. Tynan Curtains i. 137 The effect on the prison population of the knowledge that one of their number is about to be ritually strangled.
1986 J. Nagenda Seasons of T. Tebo ii. iv. 68 Thomas didn't know whether or not Mike was of their number back in Dondo.
c. The class or category of something. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > kind or sort > [noun] > a kind, sort, or class > a kind of
a spice ofc1380
number?a1425
sort1526
sort1529
space1591
a species of1620
?a1425 (c1380) G. Chaucer tr. Boethius De Consol. Philos. iv. pr. ii. 275 Nys nat yvel of the nombre of thinges that oughten ben desired.
c1550 Complaynt Scotl. (1979) vi. 48 viij sortis of vyndis of the quhilk numir ther is iiij callit vyndis cardinal.
1577 B. Googe tr. C. Heresbach Foure Bks. Husbandry i. f. 35 Columella countes it rather in the number of Fodder for cattell, then of Pulse for man.
1638 R. Baker tr. J. L. G. de Balzac New Epist. III. 103 I account not Amazons in the number of women, but of Monsters and Prodigies.
1690 W. Temple Ess. Anc. & Mod. Learning in Wks. (1720) I. 298 There are three, which I do not conceive well, how they can be brought into the Number of Sciences; which are, Chymistry, Philology, and Divinity.
1757 A. Cooper Compl. Distiller iii. lxiv. 261 Universally allowed to be a Mineral Production, of the Number of Bitumens.
d. Those forming a specified class; the multitude, the public. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > social class > the common people > [noun]
folkc888
peoplea1325
frapec1330
commona1350
common peoplea1382
commonsa1382
commontya1387
communityc1400
meiniec1400
commonaltya1425
commonsa1500
vulgarsa1513
many1526
meinie1532
multitude1535
the many-headed beast (also monster)1537
number1542
ignobility1546
commonitya1550
popular1554
populace1572
popularya1578
vulgarity?1577
populacya1583
rout1589
the vulgar1590
plebs1591
mobile vulgusc1599
popularity1599
ignoble1603
the million1604
plebe1612
plebeity1614
the common filea1616
the herda1616
civils1644
commonality1649
democracy1656
menu1658
mobile1676
crowd1683
vulgusa1687
mob1691
Pimlico parliament?1774
citizenry1795
polloi1803
demos1831
many-headed1836
hoi polloi1837
the masses1837
citizenhood1843
John Q.1922
wimble-wamble1937
society > society and the community > social class > [noun] > distinction of class > level or grade > those belonging to
number1542
tribe1609
species1644
specifical1651
syntagma1813
status group1902
status grouping1920
1542 Bp. S. Gardiner Let. c1 July (1933) 356 I speake for the numbre, which they them selves will take for no reproche.
1578 J. Banister Hist. Man vii. f. 91v Casula..the barbarous number, by the addition of one letter pronounce it Capsula.
?1611 G. Chapman tr. Homer Iliads ix. 118 Who liuing thus apart Proues vs but number: for his want, makes all our weaknesse seene.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Coriolanus (1623) iii. i. 76 By mingling them with vs, the honor'd Number . View more context for this quotation
1738 A. Pope One Thousand Seven Hundred & Thirty Eight Dialogue II 9 The Number may be hang'd, but not be crown'd.
9. With preceding adjective.
a. A (large, small, etc.) collection or aggregate of persons or things. Also with preceding adverb and a, as quite a number, etc.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > relative position > arrangement or fact of being arranged > state of being gathered together > an assemblage or collection > [noun] > of people or animals > number assembled
numbera1375
poll1607
a1375 (c1350) William of Palerne (1867) 2300 A brem numbre of bestes.
c1450 (?a1400) Wars Alexander (Ashm.) 955 (MED) He..metes him in þe myd-fild with a mekill nounbre.
a1500 Partenay (Trin. Cambr.) 37 (MED) Ther was A Erle..Which of children had A huge noumbre gret.
1533 T. More Answere Poysened Bk. Pref. sig. Aa.vi There ys no small nomber of suche erronyouse englyshe bookes prented.
?a1562 G. Cavendish Life Wolsey (1959) 26 Your..banquette, where was assembled such a number of excellent fair dames.
1638 F. Junius Painting of Ancients 28 Among such a number of rich and artificiall monuments.
1678 J. Phillips tr. J.-B. Tavernier Indian Trav. ii. xxiv. 202 in tr. J.-B. Tavernier Six Voy. The Java Lords,..drawing their poyson'd Daggers, cry'd a Mocca upon the English, killing a great number of them.
1719 D. Defoe Life Robinson Crusoe 61 There arose an innumerable Number of Fowls of many Sorts.
1743 J. Morris Serm. vii. 191 There is a great number of other passages of scripture, in which they must be understood of children.
1788 J. Madison in Federalist Papers lviii. 164 The difficulty..in engaging in the federal service, a large number of such characters as the people will probably elect.
1844 R. W. Emerson Ess. 2nd Ser. viii. 250 I might see a great number of rich, ignorant, book-read, conventional, proud men.
1897 F. Hall in Nation 64 396/2 A good number of them were, doubtless, brought across the ocean by British immigrants.
1915 W. S. Maugham Of Human Bondage cvii. 561 Their clientele..consisted of..a large number of music-hall artistes.
1986 J. Huxley Leaves of Tulip Tree i. 17 A very small number of centimes were allotted to us each week as pocket money.
b. As a mass noun. Now only following in (formerly also †to).
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > relative position > arrangement or fact of being arranged > state of being gathered together > an assemblage or collection > [noun]
queleta1382
congregationc1384
numberc1400
hirselc1425
company1439
assemblement1470
bundle1535
sort1563
raccolta1591
bevy1604
crew1607
congest1625
concoursea1628
nest1630
comportation1633
racemationa1641
assembly1642
collect1651
assemblage1690
faggot1742
museum1755
pash1790
shock1806
consortium1964
c1400 (?c1380) Cleanness (1920) 1283 Þe golde of þe gazafylace to swyþe gret noumbre.
1411 Rolls of Parl. III. 650/1 The same Robert..dyd assemble greet noumbre of men armed and arrayed ageyn the pees.
?a1425 Mandeville's Trav. (Egerton) (1889) 83 (MED) In bathe þir citez dwellez Cristen men..in grete noumer [Fr. grant fuisoun].
1485 in J. Raine Vol. Eng. Misc. N. Counties Eng. (1890) 43 Wt othre in grete nombre assembled ther.
a1533 Ld. Berners tr. A. de Guevara Golden Bk. M. Aurelius (1546) sig. B.ij There is greatte nombre of parcialities.
1554 D. Lindsay Dialog Experience & Courteour 5684 in Wks. (1931) I. 367 With small nummer of monkis and freris.
1558 in J. B. Paul Accts. Treasurer Scotl. (1913) X. 375 That thai with thair hors, cartis, sleddis and crelis in sic noumer.
1600 R. Kittowe Loues Load-starre sig. C His onely sonne, of whom..there should proceed..nations, multiplied in such number, as incomparabilitie shuld equal the innumerable starres.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Twelfth Night (1623) iii. iii. 29 Belike you slew great number of his people. View more context for this quotation
1625 K. Long tr. J. Barclay Argenis ii. i. sig. Q The people, called by a Cryer, came in great number thronging to the Iudgement seate.
1719 J. Barker Exilius (ed. 2) II. ii. i. 179 Thus was I, poor Maid, expos'd to..lewd Out-laws, who inhabit those Woods in great Number.
a1822 P. B. Shelley Masque of Anarchy (1832) xxxviii. 20 Rise, like lions after slumber, In unvanquishable number.
1869 J. S. Mill Subject. Women iii Women cannot be expected to devote themselves to the emancipation of women, until men in considerable number are prepared to join with them.
1906 J. H. Macdonald tr. L. Bianchi Textbk. Psychiatry iii. xiii. 680 In the typical form [of mania]..neologisms and symbols are found in great number.
1993 Harper's Mag. Feb. 36/1 I went to the Napoleon Club in Boston's Beacon Hill and stared..at peacock men, gays I'd never seen in such number.
c. With complementary of-phrase unexpressed.
ΚΠ
a1470 T. Malory Morte Darthur (Winch. Coll. 13) (1990) III. 1216 The noble knyghtes of the cite cam a greate numbir.
1535 Bible (Coverdale) Gen. xxxiv. E I am but a small nombre: Yf they gather them selues now together against me, they shal slaye me.
1560 J. Daus tr. J. Sleidane Commentaries f. cxxx Therfore were bookes brought thether in a wonderfull numbre.
1589 T. Cooper Admon. People of Eng. 120 Which dealing..cannot be without great offence of an infinite nomber.
1611 Bible (King James) Acts xi. 21 A great number beleeued, and turned vnto the Lord. View more context for this quotation
1693 in Rothesay Town Council Rec. (1935) II. 485 A sert nwmber to..revise the cesse book impost.
1724 J. Henley et al. tr. Pliny the Younger Epist. & Panegyrick I. iv. vii. 164 A great Number think him an Orator.
1833 C. F. Crusé tr. Eusebius Eccl. Hist. (ed. 2) iv. iii. 130 This work is also preserved by a great number.
1861 Amer. Agriculturist July 198/3 Only a small number will produce perfect flowers.
1895 Pall Mall Mag. Nov. 459 A considerable number are employed in..workshops.
1931 A. U. Dilley Oriental Rugs & Carpets iv. 124 Except for a small number woven in medallion pattern upon a plain field, the Feraghans were produced in all-over design.
1961 Lancet 2 Sept. 506/2 All strains of Staph. aureus were tested for sensitivity..and a small number were phage-typed.
1992 Disability Now May 2/3 A considerable number could live independently in their own accommodation.
10.
a. A certain, esp. a large or considerable, collection or aggregate of persons or things, not precisely reckoned or counted.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > relative position > arrangement or fact of being arranged > state of being gathered together > an assemblage or collection > [noun] > of a certain number
mustera1382
numberc1384
polla1613
c1384 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Douce 369(2)) (1850) Deeds v. 36 A noumbre of men consentide, aboute foure hundrid.
c1400 (?a1387) W. Langland Piers Plowman (Huntington HM 137) (1873) C. iv. 395 (MED) He þat mede may lacche makeþ litel tale, Nyme he a numbre of nobles oþer of shullenges.
a1425 J. Wyclif Sel. Eng. Wks. (1871) II. 309 In þe Chirche above in heven is a noumbre of greete seintis.
1535 Bible (Coverdale) Acts v. E There cleued vnto him a nombre of men, aboute a foure hundreth.
c1540 (?a1400) Gest Historiale Destr. Troy 1147 Nestor, with a nombur of noble men all.
1580 W. Fulke Discov. Daungerous Rocke in Retentiue 164 A number more of such principall heades of Christian learning.
1626 F. Bacon Sylua Syluarum §567 Water-Lilly..hath a Root in the Ground; And so have a Number of other Herbs that grow in Ponds.
c1650 J. Spalding Memorialls Trubles Scotl. & Eng. (1850) I. 46 Ane company of Hielanderis..liftit..ane number of goodis.
1799 R. Southey Lett. from Spain (ed. 2) i. 8 A number of little forts are erected about the adjoining coast.
1807 G. Chalmers Caledonia I. ii. vi. 282 The dates of both agree..in a number of their notices.
1860 S. Wilberforce Speeches on Missions (1874) 338 He..kept himself by keeping a number of bees.
1882 R. L. Stevenson New Arabian Nights I. 204 Though I have encountered a number of rogues in different quarters of the world, I never met with one so unblushing as yourself.
1923 R. Macaulay Told by Idiot iv. vi. 270 He was quite intelligent about a number of things.
1960 C. Day Lewis Buried Day ii. 39 I..sang a number of his songs, some with piano, the rest to the harp accompaniment of Sidonie Goossens.
1989 Japan Times 21 May 4/4 A number of steps were agreed to maintain the peace in the territory.
b. With complementary of-phrase unexpressed. Cf. sense 9c.In early use frequently with the sense ‘many people’ (without any contextual indication).
ΚΠ
1566 Cott. Libr. Cal. B 10 f. 372 In this mean time there rose a nombre in the Court.
1593 R. Hooker Of Lawes Eccl. Politie i. i. 48 Much..may seeme to a number perhaps tedious, perhaps obscure.
1637 R. Baillie Lett. & Jrnls. (1841) I. 6 A number lope to their friends for recommendations to court.
1770 Trial W. Wemms 88 Was that expression, we will do for the soldiers, uttered by a number or by a few?
1788 A. Hamilton in Federalist Papers xv. 93 Regard to reputation has a less active influence, when the infamy of a bad action is to be divided among a number, than when it is to fall singly upon one.
1839 C. Darwin in R. Fitzroy & C. Darwin Narr. Surv. Voy. H.M.S. Adventure & Beagle III. iii. 67 If a hunting party kills an animal, a number [of carrion-feeders] soon collect and patiently await,..on all sides.
1840 J. H. Newman Church of Fathers x. 174 The testimony of a number is more cogent than the testimony of two or three.
1910 Encycl. Brit. I. 917/1 A bomb was thrown, several policemen being killed and a number wounded.
1967 Brit. Jrnl. Psychiatry 113 805/2 What preventive measures can we take? A number are suggested.
1990 Music Technol. Apr. 7/1 This is the first system of its kind to be installed outside the USA, where a number are already installed.
c. In partitive construction without of. Obsolete. rare.
ΚΠ
1583 G. Babington Very Fruitfull Expos. Commaundem. vi. 278 With a number such mockes and diuelish tauntes.
1583 G. Babington Very Fruitfull Expos. Commaundem. vi. 285 Vnto which and a number such other perswasions in the worde the prophane writers..haue agreed.
1598 N. Breton Solemne Passion Soules Loue sig. A3 A number plagues the Lord did further threaten.
d. As a mass noun. Obsolete. rare.
ΚΠ
1663 B. Gerbier Counsel to Builders sig. g2v Nor is this present Age void of number of Authors, who have written more on Architecture.
1664 B. Gerbier Counsel to Builders (new ed.) i. sig. e6 Clovis..did Coat number of Flour-de-lis.
11. A (considerable) quantity or amount (of). Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > quantity > [noun]
metc1225
mountancec1330
amountancec1380
mountenancec1385
quantityc1392
quantitya1398
substance1435
mountenessea1450
mountc1475
number1477
feck1488
quantum1602
valour1631
amount1668
amt.1744
volume1882
1477 W. Caxton tr. R. Le Fèvre Hist. Jason (1913) 103 They..promised them grete nombre of money if they might come & obteyne their entent.
1534 R. Whittington tr. Cicero Thre Bks. Tullyes Offyces iii. sig. S.1 An honest man hath..brought a great nombre of wheate in the derth tyme.
1540 in B. Cusack Everyday Eng. 1500–1700 (1998) 113 One his clok lap scho vas deliuerand hyme mony scho kennis not ye nomor of ye miony.
c1650 J. Spalding Memorialls Trubles Scotl. & Eng. (1850) I. 347 The cordineris of both Abirdeins wes commandit..to give wp..the number of thair ledder, and to mak wp..thair portioun of 20,000 pair of schois.
1720 Humourist 185 I have seen..one Man plowing with one Horse; which..saves a Number of Money.
12. In plural.
a. A (great, infinite, etc.) multitude of people or things.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > number > plurality > great number, numerousness > [noun] > a large number or multitude
sandc825
thousandc1000
un-i-rimeOE
legiona1325
fernc1325
multitudec1350
hundred1362
abundancec1384
quantityc1390
sight1390
felec1394
manyheada1400
lastc1405
sortc1475
infinityc1480
multiplie1488
numbers1488
power1489
many1525
flock1535
heapa1547
multitudine1547
sort1548
myriads1555
myriads1559
infinite1563
tot-quot1565
dickera1586
multiplea1595
troop1596
multitudes1598
myriad1611
sea-sands1656
plurality1657
a vast many1695
dozen1734
a good few1756
nation1762
vast1793
a wheen (of)1814
swad1828
lot1833
tribe1833
slew1839
such a many1841
right smart1842
a million and one1856
horde1860
a good several1865
sheaf1865
a (bad, good, etc.) sortc1869
immense1872
dunnamuch1875
telephone number1880
umpty1905
dunnamany1906
skit1913
umpteen1919
zillion1922
gang1928
scrillion1935
jillion1942
900 number1977
gazillion1978
fuckload1984
society > faith > aspects of faith > Bible, Scripture > Testament > Old Testament > divisions of Old Testament > [noun] > Numbers
Numerya1382
numbers1488
Numb.1651
1488 (c1478) Hary Actis & Deidis Schir William Wallace (Adv.) (1968–9) vii. l. 1104 He chargyt thaim with nowmeris mony ane Rycht weill beseyn in Scotland for to ryd.
c1540 (?a1400) Gest Historiale Destr. Troy 11139 What fortherit the fight of þo fell maidyns, Syn the grekes on hom gedrit in so gret nowmbers?
1555 in Dict. Older Sc. Tongue (1973) IV. 595/1 The deir..ar slane in great nowmeris in all this pairtis.
?1573 L. Lloyd Pilgrimage of Princes 21 Xerxes,..whose infinite numbers of Navies covered the Ocean seas.
1600 J. Pory tr. J. Leo Africanus Geogr. Hist. Afr. vi. 271 Here are infinite numbers of scorpions, but no flies at all.
1651 T. Hobbes Leviathan ii. xxix. 166 It hath the resemblance of an unjust act; which disposeth great numbers of men..to rebell.
1690 J. Locke Ess. Humane Understanding i. iii. 26 Tenets, which are firmly believed..and which great numbers are ready at any time to seal with their Blood.
1726 J. Swift Gulliver II. iii. viii. 112 I had the Curiosity to enquire..by what Method great Numbers had procured to themselves high Titles of Honour.
1785 T. Jefferson Notes Virginia vi. 108 (note) Great numbers of French, of English, and of Americans, are perfectly acquainted with these people.
1813 Duke of Wellington Dispatches (1838) XI. 21 The French have lost immense numbers of men.
1847–9 Todd's Cycl. Anat. & Physiol. IV. i. 2/2 The numbers in which these creatures abound baffles all expression.
1944 R. Matheson Entomol. for Introd. Courses xii. 244 The pink and green potato aphid..frequently occurs in immense numbers.
1987 P. Auster Country of Last Things (1988) 131 Dr. Woburn was among the first to call attention to the growing numbers of homeless people.
b. Many people or things.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > number > plurality > great number, numerousness > [noun] > a large number or multitude > of individuals, people
un-i-fohOE
felec1175
power1489
camp-royal1593
numbers1597
crowd1654
stock1668
somedeal1851
1597 R. Hooker Of Lawes Eccl. Politie v. lxviii. 185 Whereas none of them which were in the one could perish, numbers in the other are cast away.
1629 in P. H. Brown Reg. Privy Council Scotl. (1901) 2nd Ser. III. 66 Be beggarlie lymmaris of who lykeways nombers lyes between Leith and Edinburgh.
1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost xi. 480 A Lazar-house it seemd, wherein were laid Numbers of all diseas'd. View more context for this quotation
1709 J. Swift Project Advancem. Relig. 7 They might..be raised to as high a Perfection as Numbers are capable of receiving.
1762 O. Goldsmith Citizen of World II. 44 There are numbers in this city who live by writing new books.
1801 M. Edgeworth Forester in Moral Tales I. 70 Able to speak..before numbers.
1861 F. Metcalfe Oxonian in Iceland (1867) 182 Numbers of fish kept rising at my grilse flies.
1866 S. Wilberforce Speeches on Missions (1874) 261 It was a time when sermons were read by numbers, and admired by multitudes.
1925 L. O'Flaherty Informer (1989) 223 I know numbers of them.
1991 T. Marshall Changelings (1992) vii. 119 They are sought after by numbers of wolves.
c. Numerical preponderance; the fact of being numerous. Frequently in force (also weight) of numbers.safety in numbers: see safety n. Phrases 3.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > number > plurality > great number, numerousness > [noun] > greater number, majority
moeOE
unfewc1175
most?a1400
most forcea1400
substancea1413
overmatch1542
flush1592
the (great, vast) mass of1604
the millions1604
stream1614
numbers1638
the multiplicity of1639
majority1650
1638 T. Herbert Some Yeares Trav. (rev. ed.) 289 1000 Persians were slaine and 20000 Turks; but by their numbers the Persians were forced to leave the field.
1639 G. Daniel Vervicensis 67 My name preserve By force of Numbers, which revert the Lawes Of Destinie.
1645 J. Winthrop Declar. Former Passages 7 The Narrowgansets and their confederates rest on their numbers, weapons, & opportunityes to do mischief.
1761 C. Churchill Night 16 Can numbers then change Nature's stated laws? Can numbers make the worse the better cause?
1776 H. H. Brackenridge Battle of Bunkers-Hill 43 Our right wing push'd, our left surrounded, Weight of numbers five to one.
1861 F. Metcalfe Oxonian in Iceland (1867) 176 Coming to close quarters, they overpowered the foreigners by force of numbers.
1898 Argosy May 256 Their one idea was..hooking on with gangways, overpower them by force of numbers.
1910 Encycl. Brit. I. 820/1 His troops were raw and possessed no decisive superiority in numbers.
1941 Faugh-a-Ballagh 34 97/2 A series of heavy mass attacks, designed to crush the R.A.F. by sheer weight of numbers and to sweep the skies clear.
1992 WWF News 90 The lucky ones..will remain here for the rest of their lives unless driven out by force of numbers.
III. Senses relating to the action of enumerating.
13.
a. An enumeration, an account; a reckoning; (also) a count, a census. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > number > enumeration, reckoning, or calculation > [noun] > counting people
numberingc1325
numbera1382
lustrum1598
capitation1646
poll1659
roll-calling1752
roll-call1763
census1769
conscription1797
head-counting1831
roller1883
headcount1913
a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) (1961) Lev. xxv. 14 After þe noumbre [a1425 L.V. rekenyng; L. supputationem] of frutes, he shal sulle to þe.
c1626 H. Bisset Rolment Courtis (1922) II. 105 Heir followes the..numer of all the monasteries..ministeries..nunries and cells withtin the kingdome.
1831 T. Buttrick Voy. 33 Two gentlemen undertook to take a number of these people, and found it to be about twelve hundred.
b. In modern use in form Numbers, with singular agreement. A book of the Old Testament and Hebrew Scriptures, which includes an account of a census of the Israelites. In early use also in singular.
ΚΠ
c1425 Bible (Wycliffite, L.V.) (Queen's Oxf.) Num. Prol. 364 This book clepid Numeri, that is to seie, the book of Noumbre.
a1450 (c1395) Prefatory Epist. St. Jerome in Bible (Wycliffite, L.V.) (New Coll. Oxf.) (1850) 68 The book of Noumbre..wher he conteyne not the mysteries of al the hool crafte..and of the profecie of Balaam, and of the xlij dwellyngis in wildirnesse?
1502 tr. Ordynarye of Crysten Men (de Worde) iv. xxi. sig. aa.i Ye auncyent testament in the .xxv. chapytre of nombres.
1563 2nd Tome Homelyes Idolatry iii, in J. Griffiths Two Bks. Homilies (1859) ii. 175 As it is written in the book of Numbers, the twenty-third chapter, that there was no idol in Jacob.
1589 T. Cooper Admon. People of Eng. 127 In the Nombers, he that brake the Sabbath day, was stoned to death.
1649 F. Roberts Clavis Bibliorum (ed. 2) 52 Numbers,..so called because a great part of the Book, especially at the beginning, is spent in Numbring of the Tribes and Families of Israel.
1728 E. Chambers Cycl. at Pentateuch The five books of Moses..; viz. Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy.
1840 Penny Cycl. XVII. 426/2 The book of Deuteronomy supposes the previous composition of Exodus, Leviticus, and Numbers.
1875 Encycl. Brit. III. 638/1 The Levitico-Elohistic document, which embraces most of the laws in Leviticus with large parts of Exodus and Numbers.
1910 Encycl. Brit. I. 716/2 The rod of Aaron, mentioned in Numbers xvii., was taken from an almond-tree.
1989 R. Alter Pleasures of Reading iv. 118 We get a sense of restitution made in Joshua for the espionage fiasco of Numbers.
1996 Church Times 16 Feb. 11/4 Setting Numbers against John..invites us to commit the second-century heresy of Marcionism.
IV. Technical senses involving the application of numerical properties.
14.
a. Harmony; conformity, in verse or music, to a certain regular beat or measure; rhythm. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > literature > poetry > versification > rhythm > [noun]
cadencec1384
coloura1522
rhythmus1531
running1533
number1553
rhythm1560
cadency1628
chimea1649
run1693
a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) (1965) Ecclus. xxxii. 8 As in forgyng of gold signe is of a smaragd, so þe noumbre of musikis in myrie & temprat win.
a1500 (c1477) T. Norton Ordinal of Alchemy (BL Add.) (1975) 2364 Withowte tru nombre no man truly may singe.
1553 T. Wilson Arte of Rhetorique iii. f. 85v He maie appere to kepe an vniformitiee, and (as I might saie) a nomber in the vttering of his sentence.
1584 King James VI & I Ess. Prentise Poesie sig. Eij The harmony of nomber tone and song.
a1629 W. Hinde Faithfull Remonstr. (1641) iii. 11 Mixt dancing of men and women, with light and lascivious gestures and actions, framed in number and measure to please a wanton eye.
1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost iv. 687 With Heav'nly touch of instrumental sounds In full harmonic number joind. View more context for this quotation
b. The arithmetic proportion corresponding to a given harmonic interval. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > relationship > [noun] > proportion or ratio
numbera1387
proportiona1387
compassc1400
quantity1556
proport1565
Numb.1653
scale1662
ratio1663
ration1728
a1387 J. Trevisa tr. R. Higden Polychron. (St. John's Cambr.) (1871) III. 205 (MED) He [sc. Pythagoras] gan to fynde noumbres by þe whiche sownes accordeþ, and so he spedde to make þe craft of musyk.
c1400 J. Trevisa tr. R. Higden Polychron. (Tiber.) f. 92 (MED) Whanne þes acordes wer yfounde, Picthagoras ȝaf ham names, & so þat a clepuþ in numbre double, a clepeþ in sounes dyapason, & þat a clepeþ in numbre oþer half, a clepeþ in sounes diapente.
a1500 (c1477) T. Norton Ordinal of Alchemy (BL Add.) (1975) 1669 Accordis which in musike be, with theire proporcions cawsen Armonye, Moch like proporcions be in Alchemye, As for the grete nombres actualle.
1579 E. K. in E. Spenser Shepheardes Cal. Oct. 27 Gloss. Plato and Pythagoras, held for opinion, that the mynd was made of a certaine harmonie and musicall nombers.
15. A geometrical figure. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > number > geometry > shape or figure > [noun]
figure1340
numbera1398
species1660
simplex1905
a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add.) f. 328 Þe numbre lyneal begynneþ fro oon and is y-write arewe and lyne anon to endeles.
a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add.) f. 328 Þe numbre superficial is y-write nought oonliche in lengþe but also in brede..a þrecornered nombre and foure cornered and fyue cornered and rounde.
16. Grammar. The classification of word forms according to the number of entities to which they refer, usually one or more than one; (also) a particular form so classified.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > language > linguistics > study of grammar > other grammatical categories or concepts > [noun] > number
numbera1398
a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add.) f. 9v Eueriche is I-seide..of al þre at ones in þe singuler noumbre & nouȝt in plural.
c1400 (?a1387) W. Langland Piers Plowman (Huntington HM 137) (1873) C. iv. 339 In kynde, in cas, and in numbre.
c1443 R. Pecock Reule of Crysten Religioun (1927) 72 (MED) Speche in þe plurel noumbre vndirstondun of oon persoon is nouȝwhere ellis usid in holy scripture.
c1450 J. Capgrave Life St. Katherine (Arun. 396) (1893) i. 255 She hadde maystres..To teeche hir of retoryk and gramer..The cases, the novmbres, and such-maner gyse.
c1450 in D. Thomson Middle Eng. Grammatical Texts (1984) 17 Wyt qwat case wele þe comparatyf degre construe? Wyt ablatyf case of bothe nowmberis.
1523 J. Fitzherbert Bk. Surueyeng ix. f. 9 Where he sayth de molendinis, ye whiche is in the plurell nombre.
1591 R. Percyvall Bibliotheca Hispanica Gram. sig. B3 There are two numbers, the singular speaking of one, the plurall of moe.
a1637 B. Jonson Eng. Gram. i. viii, in Wks. (1640) III Of Number, that word is termed to be, which signifieth a number singular, or plurall.
1680 in Jrnl. Eng. & Germ. Philol. (1937) 36 459 Neutrall are the names of countries, cities, towns and villages..diminutives and words of number..and adjectives.
1738 Gentleman's Mag. Apr. 182/2 The Plural Number of ὕδωρ is often made use of where a large Quantity of Water is designed to be expressed.
1795 L. Murray Eng. Gram. 26 The singular number expresses but one object.
1872 R. Morris Hist. Outl. Eng. Accidence 93 The oldest English had the dual number only in the personal pronouns, which we no longer preserve.
1933 L. Bloomfield Lang. xvi. 272 Distinctions of number..are merged with the gender-classification.
1992 ELT Jrnl. 46 90 Non-native speakers of English..express horror and amazement at the discovery of ‘singular they’ which goes against all they have learned about number concord.
17.
a. In plural. Metrical periods or feet; lines, verses. Obsolete (rare in later use).
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > literature > poetry > poem or piece of poetry > [noun] > poems or poems collectively
makinga1393
poetryc1395
rhymea1400
poetryc1475
line?1566
numbers1579
harping1819
1579 E. Spenser Shepheardes Cal. Oct. sig. L3 v The numbers rise so ful, & the verse groweth so big, that it seemeth he hath forgot the meanenesse of shepheards state and stile.
1598 W. Shakespeare Love's Labour's Lost iv. iii. 54 I feare these stubborne lines lacke power to moue... These numbers will I teare, and write in prose. View more context for this quotation
1629 W. Davenant Trag. Albovine Ded. My Numbers I do not shew unto the publick Eye, with an ambition to be quickly known.
1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost iii. 38 Then feed on thoughts, that voluntarie move Harmonious numbers . View more context for this quotation
1711 A. Pope Ess. Crit. 21 Most by Numbers judge a Poet's Song, And smooth or rough, with such, is right or wrong.
1773 H. Chapone Lett. Improvem. Mind II. 167 Numbers and rhymes..being so easily learn'd by heart.
1808 L. Murray Eng. Gram. Illustr. I. App. ii. iii. 457 Our translators of the Bible, have often been happy in suiting their numbers to the subject.
1849 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. II. vii. 202 Men were in no humour to be charmed by the transparent style and melodious numbers of the apostate.
1915 W. S. Maugham Of Human Bondage cxviii. 624 Those fresh, strong girls whom old Herrick had praised in exquisite numbers.
b. In plural. Musical periods; groups of notes; (gen.) melodies, musical strains. Also in extended use with reference to birdsong, etc. Now poetic.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > music > piece of music > section of piece of music > [noun] > phrase > group of phrases
numbers1595
period1866
section1866
sentence1891
1595 B. Barnes Divine Cent. Spirituall Sonnets sig. Cv Why turne you not your numbers musicall To God aboue mans praise which ruleth all?
a1625 F. Beaumont & J. Fletcher Philaster v. i, in F. Beaumont & J. Fletcher Comedies & Trag. (1679) The god that sings His holy numbers [1620 Number] over marriage beds, Hath knit their noble hearts.
1671 J. Milton Paradise Regain'd iv. 252 The secret power Of harmony in tones and numbers hit By voice or hand. View more context for this quotation
1693 M. Prior Lady of Quality's playing on Lute in Examen Poeticum 438 That with Your Numbers you our Zeal might raise.
1702 N. Rowe Tamerlane i. i. sig. C3v When some skilful Artist strikes the Strings, The magick numbers rouse our sleeping Passions.
1772 W. Jones Poems 138 Now on the flute with equal grace he play'd, And his soft numbers died along the shade.
1810 W. Scott Lady of Lake i. 3 Harp of the North! that..down the fitful breeze thy numbers flung.
a1839 W. M. Praed Poems (1864) II. 354 Pour again those holy numbers, Which thou warblest there alone.
a1861 D. Gray Yellowhammer in Poet. Wks. (1874) 157 I'll sing to you in numbers high A summer song that shall not die.
1915 J. Rhoades Aurea Ætas 52 Not too harshly in your ears may sound The sigh-born numbers of an exile's song.
a1945 J. C. Ransom Winter Remembered in Sel. Poems (1963) 38 Your improbable tale Is recited in the classic numbers of the nightingale.
c. Prosody. A metrical subdivision of a line. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > literature > poetry > part of poem > [noun] > line > subdivision of line
number1797
1797 Monthly Mag. 3 258 (note) Whatever exceeded two times (a short syllable being estimated as half a time) was termed not a foot but a number.
V. Senses relating to number as an abstract property, faculty, or principle.
18. The fact of being numerous; = sense 12c. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > number > plurality > great number, numerousness > [noun]
multitudec1350
numberc1390
pluralitya1398
manynessc1500
multitudine1547
umberment1550
infiniteness1579
numbers1591
populacy1597
plurity1600
numerosity1611
populosity1614
numerousness1631
populousness1651
multitudinousness1653
multitudinosity1840
c1390 G. Chaucer Melibeus B. 2846 The victorie of batailles..lith nat in greet nombre or multitude of peple.
a1522 G. Douglas tr. Virgil Æneid (1957) ii. vii. 109 By multitude and nowmyr apon ws set All ȝeid to wraik.
1612 F. Bacon Ess. (new ed.) 235 Walled Towns,..Masse of treasure, Number in Armies.., are all but a Sheep in a Lions skin, except the..disposition of the people be militarie.
1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost v. 901 Nor number, nor example with him wrought To swerve from truth. View more context for this quotation
19. That aspect of things which is involved in considering them as separate units of which one or more may be taken or distinguished.
ΚΠ
1570 H. Billingsley tr. Euclid Elements Geom. vii. f. 183 Nomber compaseth all thinges, and is..the being and very essence of all thinges.
1611 T. Heywood Golden Age ii. sig. D2v Shall I sweet Lady, adde vnto your grace, And but for number-sake supply that place?
1623 P. Massinger Duke of Millaine i. iii. 334 This present iourney, (From whence it is all number to a cypher, I ner'e returne with honor).
1690 J. Locke Ess. Humane Understanding ii. xvi. 100 Our Idea of Infinity..seems to be nothing but the Infinity of Number.
1776 S. Foote Bankrupt ii. 37 I..call'd him a citizen, in the London Gazette,..Pass'd a few necessary notes to get him number and value, white-wash'd him, and sent him home.
a1782 Ld. Kames Elements Crit. (1785) II. App. 518 A child..perceives a difference between many and few; and that difference it is taught to call number.
1866 Duke of Argyll Reign of Law ii. 75 These laws of number and proportion pervade all Nature.
1884 tr. H. Lotze Logic 189 That other saying.., that God has ordered everything by measure and number.
1943 Jrnl. Psychol. 15 99 The use of such directly representational methods as bags of pebbles or tally sticks..which allow exact representation of number and accurate designation of the number of items already noted or counted.
1973 Sci. Amer. Apr. 103/3 Nonmathematical scholars tend to view with profound indifference the tortures that mathematicians suffer over such basic issues as the nature of number.
1991 C. Mansall Discover Astrol. i. 17/1 Music was thought to be the expression of number in terms of sound.
20. The faculty of reckoning or calculating (originally in phrenology).
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > psychology > faculty psychology > psychological study of the skull > [noun] > faculty of calculation
number1815
1815 J. G. Spurzheim Physiognom. Syst. viii. 441 All that which concerns unity and plurality—number—seems to belong to this faculty.
1835 Brit. Cycl. Arts & Sci. 2 218/1 The organ of calculation or number (as it is sometimes called) is marked 28.
1885 Encycl. Brit. XVIII. 845/2 Number, on the external angular process of the frontal bone.
1988 N. Chomsky Lang. & Probl. of Knowl. v. 167 Birds may have certain limited capacities to match arrays of not too many items, but that has nothing to do with the faculty of number.

Phrases

P1.
a. In phrases denoting that persons, things, etc., have not been, or cannot be, counted. Esp. in without number, (now chiefly South Asian) out of number.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > number > plurality > great number, numerousness > impossible to number [phrase]
out of numberc1325
without numberc1325
out of all scotch and notch1589
more than you can shake a stick at1818
c1325 (c1300) Chron. Robert of Gloucester (Calig.) 8161 Folc of arabie, So muche þat þer nas non noumbre of hor compainye.
c1330 (?a1300) Arthour & Merlin (Auch.) (1973) 7297 (MED) Man and hous þai brent and bredden And her godes oway ledden, Wiþouten no [m] bre.
c1390 G. Chaucer Melibeus 2579 Ther of folweth another vengeance, peril, and werre, and othere damages with oute nombre.
c1400 (c1378) W. Langland Piers Plowman (Laud 581) (1869) B. xx. 267 Ȝe [sc. friars] wexeth out of noumbre.
c1450 (?a1400) Wars Alexander (Ashm.) 449 (MED) Þis hathill man..sall..out of nounbre to neuyn of nacions wynn.
c1475 (?c1400) Apol. Lollard Doctr. (1842) 5 He lediþ..to helle peple wiþ outun nowmbre.
1483 W. Caxton tr. J. de Voragine Golden Legende 366 b/1 The holy poure ladyes whiche [thou] hast drawen to penaunce without nombre.
1534 R. Whittington tr. Cicero Thre Bks. Tullyes Offyces i. sig. D.4* Marathon, Salamyne, Plate,..& other out of nombre.
1611 Bible (King James) Judges vii. 12 Their camels were without number, as the sand by the Sea side for multitude. View more context for this quotation
1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost iii. 346 A shout Loud as from numbers without number. View more context for this quotation
1697 J. Dryden tr. Virgil Æneis xi, in tr. Virgil Wks. 547 The conquer'd Latians..Piles without number for their Dead prepare.
1739 D. Hume Treat. Human Nature II. i. 63 The instances are here without number.
1751 S. Johnson Rambler No. 36. ⁋5 The sense of this universal pleasure has invited numbers without number to try their skill in pastoral performances.
1821 J. Bentham Elements Art of Packing 92 Persons out of number are amusing themselves with rendering what, I hope, appears to themselves, at least, good service to the country.
1878 T. Hardy Return of Native III. vi. iii. 288 The sun was sending up the valley the same long shadow of the housetop that he had seen lying there times out of number.
1892 Law Times 92 147/1 Times without number the courts in bankruptcy have been called upon to decide the question.
1923 National Geographic Mag. Apr. 400/1 Accidents and delays without number would occur.
1993 U. Chatterjee Last Burden (1994) iv. 179 To bewail its attrition is the singularity in Shyamanand that his sons, times out of number, have smirked at.
b. in number: in total, in sum; altogether. Formerly also †by number, †of number.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > wholeness > the whole or all > that is all or the whole [phrase] > in all or altogether
by numbera1375
in numbera1375
in allc1380
first and lastc1390
all wholea1393
in companya1393
in sum1399
full and whole1402
in great1421
whole and somec1425
in (the) whole1432
one with another1436
in (the) hale1437
all in great1533
up and down1562
one and other1569
in (the) aggregate1644
all told1814
the world > space > relative position > arrangement or fact of being arranged > state of being gathered together > [adverb] > in one assembly (of people or animals)
together707
togethersc1175
ymonec1300
i-samec1320
whollyc1330
in numbera1375
sam1390
insamea1400
bedene1522
a1375 (c1350) William of Palerne (1867) 2289 (MED) Kene men of armes, twenty hundered & tvo trewli in numbre.
a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) 2 Kings ii. 15 Þanne risen & wentyn twelue bi nowmbre[a1425 L.V. in noumbre; L. numero] of benjamyn.
a1425 (?a1400) G. Chaucer Romaunt Rose (Hunterian) 5259 Tweyne of noumbre is bet than thre In every counsell and secre.
a1450 tr. Guy de Chauliac Grande Chirurgie (Caius 336/725) (1970) 30 (MED) Greuaunce of þe yȝe browis..in noumbre ben 15.
c1480 (a1400) St. Barnabas 27 in W. M. Metcalfe Legends Saints Sc. Dial. (1896) I. 250 Dyscipilis..þat in nomir war lxx & twa.
a1538 T. Starkey Dial. Pole & Lupset (1989) 100 We schold not only have the pepul incresyd in nombur, but also [etc.].
1573 T. Tusser Fiue Hundreth Points Good Husbandry (new ed.) f. 45 These toppingly gests, be in number but ten.
1615 G. Sandys Relation of Journey 50 In number about thirtie or fortie thousand.
c1634 in Sc. Antiquary (1892) 6 60 [Sheep] nyne scoire and fyve in number.
1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost vi. 49 Equal in number to that Godless crew. View more context for this quotation
1749 H. Fielding Tom Jones IV. ix. i. 95 Where the Beauties, more in Number, shine. View more context for this quotation
1776 P. Schuyler Let. 12 Oct. in J. Judd Corr. Van Cortlandt Family (1977) 89 This enables me to send you all the batteaux I have here, but they are only ten or eleven in number.
c1790 W. Cowper Catharina (N.Y., Morgan Libr.) 1 Though the pleasures of London exceed In number the days of the year.
1869 R. H. Dana Two Years before Mast (rev. ed.) 435 San Francisco, with its..thousand-ton clipper ships, more in number than London or Liverpool sheltered that day.
1886 Law Times 82 94/1 A mortgage of the stock of sheep, about 6500 in number, on an Australian run.
1920 Amer. Woman Aug. 21/1 The motifs, four in number, are connected by lines of cording.
1992 Nat. Hist. Feb. 44/1 About fifty in number, these genes, clustered on chromosome 17 in mice..are known as the major histocompatibility locus.
c. in number: in numerical place or order. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > order > order, sequence, or succession > in order, sequence, or succession [phrase] > in numerical order
in number?a1439
a1439 J. Lydgate Fall of Princes (Bodl. 263) ix. 1060 (MED) Than onto Bochas cam the tuelue in noumbre, Callid Pope Iohn.
c1480 (a1400) St. Matthias 3 in W. M. Metcalfe Legends Saints Sc. Dial. (1896) I. 222 Þe apostil sancte mathy, þat In nowmyr þe laste ves, In stad of þe tratour Iudas.
1562 N. Winȝet Certain Tractates (1888) I. 2 Thre Questionis,..quhilkis ar in noumbre the xxxiii. xxxiiii. and xxxv. of The Four Score Thre Questionis.
d. in number with (also of): together or along with. Obsolete. rare.
ΚΠ
1488 (c1478) Hary Actis & Deidis Schir William Wallace (Adv.) (1968–9) x. l. 180 Off this dispyt amendys I think to haiff, Or de thar-for in nowmyr with the laiff.
a1530 (c1425) Andrew of Wyntoun Oryg. Cron. Scotl. (Royal) viii. 6708 That thai mycht In nowmyre of thai xxx feicht.
P2. to (also of, etc.) the number of (a specified number). Formerly also without preposition.
ΚΠ
a1387 J. Trevisa tr. R. Higden Polychron. (St. John's Cambr.) (1865) I. 341 (MED) Bartholanus..come þider wiþ his þre sones..and [they] encresede to þe noumbre of nyne þowsand men.
a1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis (Fairf.) vii. 1102 (MED) Libra sit in the nombre of sevene.
?a1450 ( J. Lydgate Serpent of Division (McClean) (1911) 60 Sche sente þe schorte somme of hir sentence..compendiously in þe Nombre of sixe lettirs.
a1470 T. Malory Morte Darthur (Winch. Coll. 13) (1990) III. 1196 Many owchys, isette with stonys and perelys in golde, to the numbir of a thousande.
a1533 Ld. Berners tr. Arthur of Brytayn (?1560) cii. sig. D*vv Al thys company were to the numbre of .xv. thousande knightes.
1582 N. Lichefield tr. F. L. de Castanheda 1st Bk. Hist. Discouerie E. Indias i. vii. 18 b Where also then were in sight the number of twentie Moores skirmishing with their dartes.
1629 in P. H. Brown Reg. Privy Council Scotl. (1901) 2nd Ser. III. 51 Unleveyed..of the nomber of threttie sax.
1643 in Charters, Writs & Pub. Documents Dundee (1880) 89 Every boat comming into the shore..sall exact thereof the number of one hundreth herings.
1699 G. Farquhar Love & Bottle iii. 25 There was Mrs. Mary, Mrs. Margaret, Mrs. Lucy, Mrs. Susan, Mrs. Judy, and so forth; to the number of five and twenty, or thereabouts.
1720 D. Defoe Mem. Cavalier 209 Stamford's Regiment was entirely cut in Pieces, and several others, to the Number of about 800 Men.
1775 P. Van Cortlandt Let. 13 Nov. in J. Judd Corr. Van Cortlandt Family (1977) 33 Tories from the eastward..to the number of two or three hundred.
1852 J. D. Canning Harp & Plow 155 The candidates mounted the stump for display; While some Oberlin men, To the number of ten, Bethought it a matter for which they should pray.
1926 W. Lewis Art of being Ruled vii. v. 203 The groups..are to be counted to the number of four.
1986 B. Lopez Arctic Dreams vi. 231 There were..mock moons or paraselenae to the number of six.
P3. to make up (the) numbers (also number).
a. To complete a company or quantity, usually of predetermined size.
ΚΠ
a1616 W. Shakespeare Julius Caesar (1623) iv. ii. 262 The Enemy, marching along by them, By them shall make a fuller number vp . View more context for this quotation
1623 Bp. J. Hall Great Impostor 45 Like to some vnfaithfull Captaine that hath..filled his purse with dead paies, made vp the number of his companies with borrowed men.
1667 R. Allestree Causes Decay Christian Piety viii. 233 Though it hath too many voluntiers, yet sure 'tis this press that helps to make up its numbers.
1720 A. Pennecuik Streams from Helicon (ed. 2) ii. 155 A learn'd Clerk, five Tradesmen, and a Swain Call'd Colin, who dwelt in the neighbouring Plain, Made up the Number of Corisca's Train.
1754 S. Fielding & J. Collier Cry i. ix. 159 Two girls and a boy made up the number of this little society.
1850 N. Kingsley Diary 21 Apr. (1914) 119 They drifted once more and made up the number of 51 salmon.
1891 T. Hardy Tess of the D'Urbervilles III. xliii. 59 Now you go and lie down there, and Izz and I will make up your number.
1989 C. Hitchens in I. Hamilton Penguin Bk. 20th-cent. Ess. (1999) 529 He explains that he and his fellows are one short of a quorum for prayer. Will I make up the number?
2001 J. Robinson Voices of Queensland iv. 111 A person recruited temporarily..to make up the numbers in a gang.
b. Of a person: to be included in a party merely for convenience of numbers; (hence) to have only nominal importance.
ΚΠ
1976 Economist (Nexis) 21 Feb. 27 In some faculties standards would drop if less well qualified British students had to be accepted to make up numbers.
1985 L. Griffiths Arthur Daley's Guide to doing it Right 98 The rest are just making up the numbers.
1996 White Dwarf Sept. 98/2 The White Dwarf is a really hard character and any followers you send with him are just there to make up the numbers.
P4. colloquial. one's number is up and variants [with reference to the number on a person's lottery ticket, or some other number by which a person may be identified, as an army number] : one's time (to die, etc.) has come, one is finished or doomed. See also Phrases 8.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > death > [verb (intransitive)] > doomed to die
one's number is up1804
the mind > will > necessity > fate or destiny as determining events > beyond human control [phrase] > be destined to an adverse fate
there is no way but one1542
one's number is up1804
to have a person's number on it1917
1804 C. Lamb Let. 13 Jan. in Lett. C. & M. A. Lamb (1976) II. 130 Though this is a lottery to which none But G. Burnett would chuse to trust his all, there is no harm just to call in at Despair's office for a friend, and see if his number is come up.
1899 C. Rook Hooligan Nights iv. 56 You couldn't tallygraft to Billy no more. His number's up awright, wiv no error.
1915 ‘Bartimeus’ Tall Ship i. 11 I think our number's up, old thing.
1937 V. Bartlett This is my Life xi. 188 The Director-General said that he would nevertheless like me to broadcast a short talk under my own name... My number was up.
1975 J. Aiken Voices in Empty House xviii. 331 He'd got leukaemia. He knew his number was up.
1989 G. E. Klyve & C. G. Oakley Legend of Perseus i. 33 Down and down the submarine sank. Danaë truly believed that her number, whichever one it was, was up, and waited tensely for the inrush of water.
P5. slang (originally Military and Navy). to lose the number of one's mess: to die, to be killed. So to settle the number of a person's mess: to cause a person's death. Now archaic and rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > death > killing > kill [verb (intransitive)] > be killed
to be deadc1000
fallOE
spilla1300
suffera1616
to fall (a) prey (also victim, sacrifice) toa1774
to lose the number of one's mess1807
to go up1825
to get his (also hers, theirs)1903
to cop (also stop, catch, get, etc.) a packet1916
click1917
not to know (or to wonder) what hit one1923
to get the works1928
to go for a burton1941
(to get) the chop or chopper1945
the world > life > death > cause of death > cause death [verb (transitive)]
to be the death ofOE
slayc1000
reavec1230
dissolvec1374
visita1382
extinguish1540
expiate1594
to carry away1603
to carry off1679
devive1869
to settle the number of a person's mess1881
1807 in A. Paget Paget Papers (1896) II. 314 If we are going against Copenhagen many of us will lose the number of our mess.
1834 F. Marryat Peter Simple II. xiv. 240 I have an idea that some of us will lose the number of our mess.
1881 J. F. T. Keane Six Months in Meccah 60 Fetching me one on the skull, that would have ‘settled the number of my mess’, but for the thickness of my too attractive head-dress.
1911 C. E. W. Bean ‘Dreadnought’ of Darling xxx. 260 That meant a ride out to the blacks' camp and some of them losing the number of their mess. It did not matter who was shot.
1931 in H. M. Tomlinson Best Short Stories of War 387 It's the like o' them nine inchers can lose ye the number of yer mess, just by the blast of its passing.
P6. Nautical. to make her number: (a) (of a ship) to communicate by signal the figure by which she is registered; (in later use) (also figurative) to make one's number (colloquial): to report one's arrival, to report for duty, to pay a duty or courtesy call, to make oneself known; (b) (of a ship) to obtain a good place on the shipping register (obsolete).
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > indication > signalling > make signals [verb (intransitive)] > (of a ship) communicate by signal
to make her number1836
society > travel > travel by water > vessel, ship, or boat > [verb (intransitive)] > obtain a good place on register
to make her number1836
society > leisure > social event > visit > visiting > visit [phrase] > make oneself known
to make one's number1836
1836 F. Marryat Pirate xvii, in Pirate & Three Cutters 199 The Enterprise had made her number outside; but that she was becalmed.
1861 J. Lamont Seasons with Sea-horses xviii. 293 We found that the ‘Anna Louise’ had only made her number twelve hours before us.
1880 Daily Tel. 14 Apr. 5/5 The good ship had a first-rate captain, a skilled crew, was well found and fitted, and she may ‘make her number’ yet.
1924 G. H. A. Willis Royal Navy 269 We went off to the Duke of Wellington to ‘make our number’ to the commodore's wife.
1927 B. M. Chambers Salt Junk xxx. 256 Almost every ship on her way to and from South America makes her number to the island [sc. Fernando Noronha].
1945 ‘N. Shute’ Most Secret ix. 211 Captain (D.) was there to see them off; I made my number with him as representing V.A.C.O. and we stood chatting for a time.
1958 M. Dickens Man Overboard xii. 192 Ben saw himself on Speech Day, making his number with mothers in garden-party hats.
1989 Daily Tel. 27 June 21/8 I was able to make my number at every port we visited.
P7. figurative. to get (also take, etc.) a person's number: to have or make an accurate assessment of a person's true character, motives, weaknesses, etc. Cf. measure n. 12b.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > attention and judgement > judgement or decision > evaluation, estimation, appraisal > appraise, estimate [verb (transitive)] > take the measure of
measure?a1425
gauge1583
to sum up1631
measure1684
to touch off1766
to take (also get) the measure of1790
to get (also take, etc.) a person's number1853
reckon1853
to put up1864
size1884
to weigh up1894
to read the room1975
1853 C. Dickens Bleak House lvii. 550 Whenever a person proclaims to you ‘In worldly matters I'm a child,’..that person is only a crying off from being held accountable, and..you have got that person's number, and it's Number One.
1889 ‘M. Twain’ Connecticut Yankee xxxiv. 450 Let him go, for the present: I took his number, so to speak.
1908 N.Y. American 9 Aug. s1/1 We have their number now..and they are due for a cleaning.
1920 W. Hard Raymond Robins' Own Story 190 To hurt Bolshevism you need at least to get its number.
1970 G. Jackson Let. 29 May in Soledad Brother (1971) 265 Big Brother. He is rather transparent. I have his number.
1990 Independent 30 Jan. 19 She soon got the number of the football authorities... They were..forever telling her why something could not be done.
P8. colloquial (originally Military). to have a person's number on it: (of a bullet, shell, etc.) to be destined to strike or kill that person (see quot. 1965). Also in extended use. Cf. name n. and adj. Phrases 18.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > will > necessity > fate or destiny as determining events > must as decreed by fate [verb (intransitive)] > be destined for a person (of bullet)
to have a person's name on it1917
to have a person's number on it1917
the mind > will > necessity > fate or destiny as determining events > beyond human control [phrase] > be destined to an adverse fate
there is no way but one1542
one's number is up1804
to have a person's number on it1917
1917 A. G. Empey Over Top 312 He knows that it is only a matter of minutes before a German shell with his name and number on it will be knocking at his door.
1925 E. Fraser & J. Gibbons Soldier & Sailor Words 163 Name (or number) on, to have one's, said of a bullet that hit a man; i.e., that it was destined for him.
1965 J. Brophy & E. Partridge Long Trail 154 Number On, a fatalistic but consolatory superstition insisted that no man need fear any bullet or shell, however close it came, unless it had his regimental number (or his name and number) engraved on it.
1974 ‘C. Fremlin’ By Horror Haunted 15 I'm as safe here as..any where..if it's got your number on it, you'll get it, no matter where you are!
1992 Men's Health July 96/3 Somewhere out there is a rocker-recliner with your number on it.
P9.
a. North American (originally and chiefly Military). by the numbers [in humorous reference to the practice of military training (see quot. 1946)] : with military precision, mechanically, in a routine manner.
ΚΠ
c1918 J. F. Trounstine Give me Kiss by Numbers (song) 3 Give me a kiss by the numbers, I want to do things in a military way.
1921 Pirate Piece Nov. 3/1 By the numbers, men, refill the glass on 4.
1946 Amer. Speech 21 251 In training certain fundamental operations, such as putting on a gas mask, are taught by the numbers—at the count of one, the carrier is unfastened, at the count of two the mask is removed... To do anything ‘by the numbers’ is to do it in a practiced, routine, semi-automatic manner.
1994 S. Matheson Flying Frontiers ix. 173 I'm not a ‘by the numbers’ pilot—I'm a ‘by the seat of the pants’ pilot.
b. Originally British Military. by numbers: following simple instructions (as if) identified by numbers; (frequently derogatory) performed or accomplished in a mechanical, schematic, or unimaginative manner. Usually as postmodifier forming phrases. See also to paint by number(s) at paint v.1 Phrases 4.
ΚΠ
1941 Faugh-a-Ballagh 34 73/2 Once we progressed beyond the ‘about turn by numbers’ stage and ventured forth into the field, things began to move.
a1944 N. Coward in B. Day N. Coward: Compl. Lyrics (1998) 217/2 Let's fly away To where we don't do things by numbers Where no ‘Reveille’ wrecks our slumbers.
1987 D. Coulby & T. Booth Producing & reducing Disaffection 88 Classroom Assistant (Infants)... 9.30: Helped T with house picture (drawing by numbers). 9.45: Help A with colouring of shapes.
1990 T. Brighouse & B. Moon Managing National Curriculum 106 The last thing we want is teaching by numbers, reducing learning to a series of mechanistic measured units.
1995 Independent 7 Nov. ii. 14/2 A rare moment of tender loving design amidst a sea of cynical design-by-numbers clothes.
2001 Muzik Jan. 96/4 Ferry Corsten has kept his head below the parapet... This, however, is enormo trance-by-numbers.
P10. colloquial. to lose one's number: to make a gaffe, to lose face. rare.
ΚΠ
a1936 R. Kipling Something of Myself (1937) iv. 86 He produced a bottle of real Tokay, which I tasted, and lost my number badly by saying that it reminded me of some medicinal wine.
P11.
a. U.S. colloquial (originally in African-American usage). to do a number (occasionally to lay a number): to act with destructive force or impact; to criticize or humiliate; (hence) to have a strong, usually adverse effect. Frequently with on.
ΚΠ
1968 H. Lit Unbelievable Dict. Hip Words 12 Do a number, to get mad; make a scene; to tell somebody off; blow your cool.
1972 N.Y. Times Mag. 24 Sept. 93 There were about four or five cats doing a number on (beating hell out of) a Puerto Rican.
1974 Maclean's Nov. 19 I was on my own among male relatives, male bosses, male lovers who were all, at one time or another, doing numbers on me.
1982 S. Bellow Dean's December iv. 63 They did a number on Ridpath. They printed damaging statements.
1991 N. Baker U & I vii. 118 When Ada finally did arrive, Updike did such a number on it in his review that he felt compelled to explain..that he writes faster than he reads.
2002 Star Tribune (Minneapolis) (Electronic ed.) 6 Dec. Navigating bumpy dirt tracks and completing hairpin turns often does a number on shocks, tires, belts and other parts.
b. colloquial. to do a —— number and variants: to behave in the specified manner (frequently with the implication of predictable or habitual behaviour).
ΚΠ
1968 R. Gover JC Saves 20 Soon's somebody say boo at 'em [sc. the police], gonna be doin they main number [i.e. shooting at people].
1970 J. Didion Play it as it Lays ix. 42 We've been through this... We've done this number about fifty times.
1980 R. Rhodes Last Safari i. ii. 41 She did the garden-club number and the social number and she wasn't interested in his work.
1991 F. Cooper Jay Loves Lucy 124 We had this godawful evening... We did this whole fury number: I was pissed as a fart..and I just threw the lot at her.
c. colloquial (chiefly U.S.). to do (also pull, run) a number: to trick or cheat; to deceive. Usually with on.
ΚΠ
1971 N.Y. Times Mag. 6 June 95/1 To do a number: To affect someone, with the implication that it's in some devious manner.
1983 E. L. Sturz Widening Circles 9 He's running a number on us!
1992 N. Cohn Heart of World 77 The numbers we did. The scams we pulled.
1995 N.Y. Times Bk. Rev. 5 Mar. 17 Mr Palliser, who has already double-crossed the mystery genre, is now seen to be pulling a number on narrative and interpretation in general.
d. colloquial (chiefly U.S.) to do one's number: to perform one's required or expected role; ‘to do one's stuff’.
ΚΠ
1970 Current Slang (Univ. S. Dakota) 4 iii.–iv. 17 Don't do your number, to desist; (command).]
1978 C. James in Observer 11 June 23/2 I watched a computerised gantry-mill do its complex number with very few human beings present.
1985 New Yorker 11 Nov. 86/2 Lawyers have a vaudeville turn of phrase; they talk about going into court and ‘doing their number’.
1991 Times 14 Feb. 23/1 Then I went to Australia, got off the plane desperately ill and found that the gall bladder had done its number.

Compounds

C1. With first element in singular form.
a. General attributive.
(a) (In sense 1a.)
number-word n.
ΚΠ
1924 R. M. Ogden tr. K. Koffka Growth of Mind v. 334 Many peoples use other number-words [Ger. Zahlwörter] in counting than the ones they use in naming sums.
1937 A. Smeaton tr. R. Carnap Logical Syntax Lang. v. lxxvii. 297 ‘Moon’ is a thing-word..; ‘five’ is not a thing-word, but a number-word.
1991 Sci. Amer. Aug. 93/3 Such mathematical ideas are set out here in six chapters. They open with number words and symbols.
number-work n.
ΚΠ
1911 S. S. Colvin Learning Process iii. 51 Much of it might function equally well for the reading habit, or the number-work habit.
1962 Listener 15 Mar. 469/2 Earlier attempts to teach ‘number work’ are premature and cannot lead beyond the learning of meaningless rules.
1984 V. Day in Listener 19 Apr. 37/1 They are becoming used increasingly..for teaching the first and most basic subjects (numberwork, letter recognition, etc.).
(b) (In sense 2.)
number continuum n.
ΚΠ
1897 B. Russell in Mind 6 328 The graduated infinite series of fractions, called the number continuum, has meaning only when applied to a matter divisible ad lib.
1941 Jrnl. Philos. 38 520 Points may be derived either by some method of abstraction.., or recourse may be had to the number-continuum.
1988 Amer. Sociol. Rev. 53 922/2 The scale could be interpreted either as a 201-point extended rating scale or as a number continuum.
number series n.
ΚΠ
1890 W. James Princ. Psychol. II. xxviii. 653 Little by little in our minds the number-series is formed.
1953 A. Madwed Proc. Symp. Nonlinear Circuit Anal. 320 (title) Numerical analysis by the number series transformation method.
1985 Jrnl. Theoret. Biol. 112 667 The population of terminal branches increases in the course of time following the Fibonacci number series.
number system n.
ΚΠ
1924 R. M. Ogden tr. K. Koffka Growth of Mind v. 332 Max Wertheimer has investigated the kind of ideas employed by men who do not possess our developed number-system, in tasks where we would use numbers.
1941 G. Birkhoff & S. MacLane Surv. Mod. Algebra i. 9 The integers have one further important property, not characteristically algebraic and not shared by other number systems. This is the well-ordering principle.
1991 Sci. Amer. Aug. 109/1 The Yuki of California felt that their own number system arose from the nature of the human hand.
(c) (In sense 4a.)
number book n.
ΚΠ
1869 E. Edwards Free Town Libraries 333 To book-hawking, and especially to the sale of number-books, it [sc. the war] gave an enormous impulse.
1960 G. A. Glaister Gloss. Bk. 278 Number books, books published serially... Each part consisted of two or more sheets stitched together within blue-paper covers.
1963 Eng. Stud. 44 149 But the kind of serialisation..(often called ‘number books’ or ‘subscription books’) was really the issue and sale of a book in separate fascicules..so that the purchaser could..collect the entire work and have it..bound if he so wished.
number business n. Obsolete
ΚΠ
1827 E. Mackenzie Descr. & Hist. Acct. Newcastle II. 729 Mr. M. Brown carried on the number business with great spirit.
number-carrier n. Obsolete rare
ΚΠ
1919 M. Beer Hist. Brit. Socialism I. ii. ii. 108 He was successively a number-carrier, street bookseller, and editor of a democratic periodical.
number trade n. Obsolete
ΚΠ
1864 Glasgow Herald 11 Apr. Messrs. J. & J. Forsyth..beg to inform Dealers, Canvassers, and all others connected with the ‘Number Trade’, that they [etc.].
b.
number-average n. Chemistry an average of some parameter of the molecules of a mixture calculated as an arithmetic mean with each individual molecule contributing equally, regardless of size; frequently attributive.
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > chemistry > atomic chemistry > [adjective] > relating to molecules > average
number-average1935
1935 Jrnl. Physical Chem. 39 165 For heterogeneous materials, different methods for determining molecular weights give different ‘average’ values. Thus, it may be shown that freezing point, osmotic pressure, and end-group methods, when applied properly to an ideal mixture, result in an average value defined by the expression Mn = 1/Σ (fi/Mi) where fi is the fractional weight of the constituent of molecular weight Mi in the mixture, and the summation is to be applied to all constituents present. This average may be designated as a ‘number-average molecular weight’.
1955 Jrnl. Polymer Sci. 17 263 Number average degrees of polymerization are used to calculate the rates of initiation and transfer in vinyl polymerizations, and the extent of reaction in polycondensations.
1991 Progress Polymer Sci. 16 115 The number-average molecular weight (Mn) increases in direct proportion to monomer conversion.
number board n. a board on which numbers are displayed.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > information > publishing or spreading abroad > publishing or spreading by leaflets or notices > [noun] > placarding, postering, or billing > noticeboard > types of
sheriff's posts1600
number board1857
pole-board1909
pinboard1925
1857 W. Arthur Successful Merchant 182 Close by the number board, he placed another board laden with penny pieces.
1938 G. H. Sewell Amateur Film-making v. 54 That [sc. numbering each shot] is done by exposing before each shot a Number Board.
1993 Guardian 23 Aug. ii. 4/4 I found myself transported back to the Hippodromes of my youth with their illuminated number-boards, their bedizened chorines.
number cloth n. Horse Racing the cloth bearing a horse's number in a race.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > racing or race > horse racing > equipment > [noun] > cloths
weight cloth1887
number cloth1924
1924 E. Wallace Educated Evans vi. 131 Catskin was the one horse..that Educated Evans would have recognized without colours and number-cloth.
1975 D. Francis High Stakes i. 5 People..carrying out saddles and number cloths for the next steeplechase.
number-engaged adj. denoting a sound indicating to a caller that the telephone number dialled is engaged.
ΚΠ
1959 H. Hobson Mission House Murder xiv. 92 The phone..has been giving the number-engaged signal for over half an hour.
number form n. the shapes into which series of numbers are formed in a person's mental imagery.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > psychology > mental image > [noun] > imagery of numbers
number form1881
1881 F. Galton in Fortn. Rev. 1 June 729 The lowest order of phenomena that admit of being classed as visions, are the ‘Number forms’ to which I have drawn attention on more than one occasion.
1936 Brit. Jrnl. Educ. Psychol. 6 60 The main object of the investigation..was to find if the presence of number forms is correlated to any significant degree with arithmetical ability.
1963 Listener 28 Mar. 547/1 Some people, whenever they think about numbers, picture them in a spatial arrangement... The experiences are called number forms.
number game n. U.S. slang = sense 2e.
ΚΠ
1928 Washington Post 10 Nov. 1/2 He and Smith had been partners in the conduct of a lottery known as the ‘number game’.
1930 Penn. Superior Court Rep. 98 438 The court below committed no error in holding that the ‘number game’..constituted an illegal lottery.
1944 North Eastern Reporter 2nd Ser. 50 121 In a prosecution for operating a ‘number game’ as a game of chance for money in violation of ordinance, there must be proof that a number game is such a game or scheme of chance or gambling in absence of statute or ordinance recognizing the number game as being in such classification.
number line n. Mathematics a graduated line representing the ordered set of real numbers (sometimes only the set of integers or natural numbers), used esp. to illustrate simple numerical concepts and operations.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > number > mathematical instruments > [noun] > arithmetical instrument
mesograph1579
mesolabe1579
quipu1581
rods1618
Napier's bones1647
Napier's rods1678
reckoner1757
counter1803
adding machine1822
operameter1830
virgulaa1831
adder1856
computer1869
arithmometer1876
perforation gauge1882
Cuisenaire rod1954
number line1964
number cruncher1966
cruncher1971
1964 E. J. Swenson Teaching Arithm. to Children v. 99/1 When number lines are introduced to children, they should come in as a representation of a problem situation.
1968 P. J. Murphy & A. F. Kempf New Math. made Simple ii. 36 Since addition and subtraction are inverse operations, we expect subtraction to be associated with moving to the left on a number line.
1992 M. Field & M. Golubitsky Symmetry in Chaos v. 130 The real number line may be viewed as the horizontal x-axis in the complex plane.
number-man n. (a) a man who sells weekly or monthly publications (obsolete); (b) U.S. slang = numbers man n. at Compounds 2b.
ΚΠ
1813 in Notes & Queries (1905) 28 Jan. 66/2 Those subscribers..who choose to be accommodated with the Apocrypha may now be supplied by giving orders to the..Number-men.
1866 J. Blackwood Let. 21 Dec. in ‘G. Eliot’ Lett. (1956) IV. 321 The ‘Number Men’, i.e. men who sell the weekly and monthly publications in large numbers.
1932 Baltimore Brevities 23 Nov. 11/3 The number man whose initials are J. K. is due for a big pull-in soon unless he stops putting his clients' dough in his pockets.
1950 H. E. Goldin Dict. Amer. Underworld Lingo 146 Number-man, anyone engaged in the policy numbers racket.
number opera n. an opera in which the arias and other sections are clearly separable.
ΚΠ
1947 A. Einstein Music Romantic Era x. 117 Even a musician so retrospective as Louis Spohr could not help abandoning the number-opera towards the end of his career.
1958 Listener 24 July 141/3 ‘Die Zaubergeige’, for example, is a ‘number opera’ whose folkish tunes stem from popular Bavarian art.
1998 N.Y. Times 23 Aug. ar27/4 ‘The Rake's Progress’ is a sincere homage to the 18th-century ‘number opera’, in which the music unfolds in a numbered series of arias, ensembles and choruses.
number-plate n. a plate bearing a number, or series of numbers; spec. the registration plate of a motor vehicle.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > indication > that which identifies or distinguishes > labelling > [noun] > label, tag, or ticket > number plate
number-plate1869
society > travel > means of travel > a conveyance > vehicle > powered vehicle > parts and equipment of motor vehicles > [noun] > number plate
number-plate1869
registration plate1883
identification plate1901
plate1919
licence plate1926
tag1935
index plate1973
1869 Good Words Mar. 170/2 The white porcelain number-plates upon the doors.
1901 Motor-Car World Apr. 74/1 We greatly fear that the number-plate is coming.
1973 P. Evans Bodyguard Man viii. 67 He..scooped up a handful of dirt from the roadside and rubbed it on to the rear number-plate until it became nearly illegible.
1988 Which? Car Buying Guide 4/2 The combined cost of delivery and number plates has ranged from nothing..to over £300.
number portability n. Telecommunications a facility which enables customers to transfer from one from one telephone company to another without having to change their telephone number.
ΚΠ
1988 Network World (Nexis) 4 Apr. 3 Number portability will allow users to choose any exchange for their 800 numbers or retain the ones they have, regardless of the carrier they choose for service.
1999 Evening Post (Bristol) (Electronic ed.) 14 Dec. The introduction of number portability, where customers can keep their old number even if they change networks, has made it easier to swap to the most cost-effective network.
number runner n. U.S. slang = numbers runner n. at Compounds 2b.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > betting > betting on lotteries > [noun] > organizers
policy writer1873
policy king1894
number runner1933
numbers runner1952
1933 Brevities (N.Y.) 10 Apr. 16/2 The Tax Commissioner of the county..has a hand in the prosecution of number runners.
1966 G. Parks Choice of Weapons xx. 213 I got to know number runners and their hangouts.
1994 P. Baker Blood Posse vi. 74 The number runners, shylocks, pimps, and petty hustlers sought protection from the gangs.
number sign n. (a) a symbol or character representing a number; a numeral; (b) the hash sign, #.
ΚΠ
1892 Amer. Anthropologist 5 299 He repeats..much the same process he used in devising four; that is, places an I before the last number-sign (X, or ten) to indicate one less than, next to, or before it; that is, nine.
1951 Christian Sci. Monitor 1 Sept. 14/5 I add the number sign (#) as a special eye-catcher.
1998 D. Bellos et al. tr. G. Ifrah Universal Hist. Numbers xix. 240/1 In serto, however, as in Nestorian, letters have been used (and still are used) as number signs.
2004 Writer Apr. 14/3 If you send an e-mail using mime and your recipient doesn't use mime, the message may become garbled, turning number signs, quotes and other symbols into gobbledygook.
number-unobtainable adj. denoting a sound indicating to a caller that the telephone number dialled is unobtainable for a reason other than its being engaged.
ΚΠ
1930 Gloss. Terms Telegraphs & Telephones (B.S.I.) 47/1 Number-unobtainable tone.
1969 ‘D. Rutherford’ Gilt-edged Cockpit viii. 148 He listened..to the high whine of the ‘number unobtainable’ signal, knowing that she had left the receiver off.
1984 J. Dunlop & D. G. Smith Telecommunications Engin. x. 320 Note that if an unallowed number is dialled, or service to the number dialled has been discontinued, number-unobtainable tone is returned to the caller.
C2. With first element in plural form (chiefly in sense 2e).
a.
numbers business n.
ΚΠ
1934 Sun (Baltimore) 25 Aug. 1/2 Hawkins..identified himself as a ‘pay-off man’ in the ‘numbers business’.
numbers racket n.
ΚΠ
1934 N.Y. Times 23 Mar. 10/6 The numbers or lottery racket which had its headquarters in Passaic brought its operators $10,000 a week.
1959 Listener 28 May 924/2 I wonder how many people now remember that prominent feature of American life in the 'thirties—the numbers racket.
1985 J. Kelman Chancer (1987) 131 Got to give your bets to the fucking barber! Numbers racket, said John.
numbers racketeer n.
ΚΠ
1946 M. Mezzrow & B. Wolfe Really Blues xii. 226 The professions of..numbers racketeer, day laborer, pimp, stevedore.
1999 Mail on Sunday 26 Sept. 116/5 That sentiment would have been warmly endorsed by the two men whom King killed in his days as a numbers racketeer.
b.
numbers drop n. U.S. rare a session of betting at numbers.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > betting > betting on lotteries > [noun]
policy business1804
policy1879
numbers1897
numbers game1935
numbers drop1968
1968 P. Oliver Screening Blues iv. 134 The policy writers and numbers runners who took the bet by a rapid code of signals in the street or at the ‘numbers drop’ would urge them to play other numbers and at higher stakes.
numbers game n. (a) U.S. slang = sense 2e; (b) colloquial the practice of adducing statistics, esp. in support of an argument.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > betting > betting on lotteries > [noun]
policy business1804
policy1879
numbers1897
numbers game1935
numbers drop1968
1935 Time 21 Jan. 45/1 In Danville, Va., operators of a ‘numbers’ game were bankrupt.
1961 Nation 11 Nov. 365-7 Squabbles over election procedures, the complicated numbers game that East and West played.
1971 A. Hailey Wheels xiv. 205 Playing the numbers game—especially in auto plants—is, to Detroiters, as natural as breathing.
1999 F. McCourt 'Tis l. 443 Her boyfriend, Louis Weber..was famous for running the numbers game in the neighbourhood.
numbers man n. (a) U.S. slang a person involved in the running of a numbers game; (b) colloquial a person who is responsible for financial matters, or who is adept with or who lays great emphasis upon figures or statistics.
ΚΠ
1963 O. Harrington in Freedomways Fall 519 Nobody covers as much Harlem territory as the numbers man.
1985 T. Ferguson Onyx John vii. 187 He blackmailed and hijacked and extorted. For years, the police had considered him to be a minor pimp and a numbers man.
1987 R. Hall Kisses of Enemy (1989) xiii. 161 Numbers-men from all thirteen parties went mum, eyes darting frantic signals to their minorities to cool it for fear of losing their seats.
1998 C. Barker Galilee i. 5 Jefferson the great rationalist, the numbers man, obliged to believe the evidence of his own eyes.
numbers runner n. U.S. slang a person collecting the bets of those playing numbers.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > betting > betting on lotteries > [noun] > organizers
policy writer1873
policy king1894
number runner1933
numbers runner1952
1952 R. Ellison Invisible Man xxiii. 367 And yet, I thought, watching a numbers runner paying off a bet, this is one place that the Brotherhood definitely penetrated.
1979 E. Hardwick Sleepless Nights iv. 52 Judith has been accused more times than a numbers runner.
2000 N.Y. Mag. 3 Apr. 21/1 Jewel-encrusted pinkie rings, once limited to numbers runners and Rat Packers, have been glistening lately on the fashionable fingers of Jennifer Lopez and Lil'Kim.
C3.
a. Prefixed to a numeral, as number six, number 42, etc., for the purpose of designating things or persons by the place assigned to them in an arithmetical series. Also as adj. Frequently as postmodifier. Cf. No. n.2, Numb. n.1
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > order > order, sequence, or succession > [noun] > a series or succession > a place in a series > number assigning
number1691
numero1799
round two1937
the world > relative properties > number > mathematical number or quantity > numerical arrangement > [noun] > set > sequence > series > designating place in > symbol
number1691
a1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis (Fairf.) vii. 1186 Of Signes in the nombre ellevene Aquarius hath take his place.]
1691 R. Ames Farther Search after Claret 3 Has any one been here to ask Number Four?
1707 J. Mortimer Whole Art Husbandry (1721) I. 162 Sometimes the best Madder is worth eight or nine Pounds a hundred, and the Number O six Pound Ten Shillings.
1710 J. Swift Jrnl. to Stella 15 Sept. (1948) I. 19 I forgot to mark my two former letters; but I remember this is Number 3.
1837 C. Dickens Pickwick Papers xxv. 266 I should just like to ask you,..vether you don't con-sider yourself as nice and vell-behaved a young gen'lm'n as ever used..the number four collection?
1867 F. E. Trollope Mabel's Progress III. 5 It is hard to say..why this especial house should have been Number Nine at all, seeing there were to be but six houses in the row.
1895 W. Carleton Rhymes of our Planet 9 Genevieve, how oft it comes to me—That rather young old reading-class, in District Number Three!
1938 S. Beckett Murphy v. 95 A staple recreation..had been to wait at Walham Green for a nice number eleven [bus] and take it through the evening rush to Liverpool Street and back.
1977 World of Cricket Monthly June 50/2 The beefy Bruce Groves was one of the surprise successes of the season, batting at number three.
1988 Artist's &Illustrator's Feb. 20/1 All my painting is done with number 3 or 4 sable brushes.
b. Prefixed to a series of numerals in recounting a sequence of arguments, instructions, etc.; number one: firstly, most importantly, for a start.
ΚΠ
1871 ‘L. Carroll’ Through Looking-glass i. 4 I'm going to tell you all your faults. Number one: you squeaked twice when Dinah was washing your face this morning... Number two: you pulled Snowdrop away by the tail.
1984 J. Didion Democracy (1985) v. 86 Don't ask, number one, how Wendell Omura happens to be on Janet's lanai.
1997 ‘Q’ Deadmeat 385 That is real dangerous, because number one, they can build up the children's confidence over time, groom them, number two, the child will never suspect they are in danger.
c. Originally Military. Prefixed to a numeral, as number one, number two, etc., designating progressively longer haircuts.
ΚΠ
1925 E. Fraser & J. Gibbons Soldier & Sailor Words 211 At an inspection, for instance, an officer would tell a man, whose hair seemed too long, to ‘Get a Number One before next Parade’.
1982 N. Knight Skinhead 20 The hairstyle would be a number two or three crop with feathered fringes all round.
1991 A. Beevor Inside Brit. Army (rev. ed.) Gloss. 504 Number three haircut, standard haircut, as opposed to a Number one, which is shearing ‘right down to the wood’.
d.
number eight n. (a) Rugby Union the player in the back row of a scrum, behind the lock forwards; this position; (b) New Zealand standard 4mm gauge wire, originally used in fencing and later for other purposes (often with the implication of inventiveness); frequently attributive, esp. in number eight (fencing) wire; cf. No. eight n. at No. adv.3 and n.2 Compounds.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > materials > derived or manufactured material > metal > metal in specific state or form > [noun] > wire > types of
silver wire14..
white wire1463
virginal wire1662
pin-wire1674
binding wire1767
pinion wire1767
electric wire1819
music wire1823
gutta-percha-wire1876
No. eight1876
picture wire1876
number eight1952
microwire1953
plated wire1960
nanowire1990
society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > football > rugby football > [noun] > types of player > player or position
full back1875
goal kick1875
No. eight1876
goalkicker1879
three-quarter back1880
handler1888
three-quarter1889
heeler1892
scrum half1894
lock forward1898
standoff1902
five-eighth1905
hooker1905
threes1905
flying half1906
loose head1907
standoff1908
fly-half1918
fly1921
inside half1921
outside half1921
scrum1921
inside centre1936
flank forward1937
out-half1949
prop1950
prop forward1951
number eight1952
flanker1953
tight head1959
back-rower1969
second rower1969
striker1973
packman1992
1952 R. K. Stent Fourth Springboks 1951–2 iii. 30 Originally a centre three-quarter, Pickard went into the scrum (as a number eight).
1960 E. S. Higham & W. J. Higham High Speed Rugby 154 The Number 8 (back row loose forward)..combines, as far as possible, the duties of second row in the scrum and the flanks outside the scrum.
1973 P. Wilson N.Z. Jack 27 Then eventually we made barbs for our harpoons, by cutting a length of Number Eight wire from some farm fence.
1992 B. Anderson Portrait Artist's Wife 33 Squatting on his heels he coiled it and held it up. ‘It's only a bit of old number eight.’
number nine n. Military slang a laxative pill frequently prescribed in the armed forces as a cure-all for minor illnesses or doubtful symptoms.
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > healing > medicines or physic > [noun] > a medicine or medicament > officinal medicine
shop-magistral1665
shop medicine1665
shop-purger1665
officinal1693
euporiston1706
shop slop1706
No. nine1911
number nine1916
the world > health and disease > healing > medicines or physic > medicines for specific purpose > cleansing or expelling medicines > [noun] > purgative > pill
Holloway's pill1838
No. nine1911
number nine1916
blue pill2010
1916 Anzac Bk. 110 And should my health appear to fail And appetite grow fine, My doctor hands me—not a bill, But just a Number 9.
1935 G. Blake Shipbuilders xi. 339 If that wound's not healed by to-morrow it's M. and D. for you. And a Number Nine.
1946 J. Irving Royal Navalese 123 Number-nine Boatswain, the Warrant Wardmaster. As ‘King of the Sick Berth Staff’ this allusion to the No. 9 pill is not inappropriate.
number ten adj. and n. (a) adj. Military slang (usually in form number ten), (originally in context of the Korean War and, in later use, the Vietnam War) very bad, terrible, rotten; (b) n. (usually in form Number Ten), Number 10 Downing Street, the official London home of the British Prime Minister; also (by metonymy) denoting the British Prime Minister or the British Government.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > goodness and badness > inferiority or baseness > [adjective] > very
subter-superlative1655
terrible1775
third-rate1814
ternary1826
tenth-rate1834
No. Ten1880
tenth-remove1905
awful1916
raggedy1921
stinko1924
piss-poor1945
number ten1953
society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabited place > dwelling place or abode > a dwelling > official residence > [noun] > specific
Downing Street1772
white house1811
stud house1813
number ten1953
1953 in E. Partridge Dict. Slang (ed. 6) Suppl. 1201/1 The various degrees in the state of a soldier's feelings in Korea are seldom expressed in the well-worn favourites of World War II. He is rarely ‘browned off’... No sir. He's just ‘number one’ to ‘number ten’.
1958 L. Durrell Mountolive iv. 86 Even in the rain there was the usual little cluster of tourists and loungers outside the gates of Number Ten.
1991 Economist 7 Dec. 38/1 The impression from Number Ten is that Mr Major had expected that a tough British position would produce..concessions.
1995 G. L. Steinbrook Allies & Mates 71 You cheap Charlie, number 10 GI, number 10,000 GI.
number two pencil n. U.S. = No. 2 pencil n. at No. 2 n. Compounds.
ΚΠ
1977 Washington Post 7 Aug. (Potomac section) 25/1 If you hope to go to college next year, you will have to give up a Saturday morning, take a number two pencil and, with the eraser end, break the seal on the Scholastic Aptitude Test.
1999 Village Voice (N.Y.) 10 Aug. 125/1 Everybody has access to a number two pencil, not everyone will be able to use a computer.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2003; most recently modified version published online June 2022).

numberv.

Brit. /ˈnʌmbə/, U.S. /ˈnəmbər/
Forms:

α. early Middle English noumbri, Middle English nobir (transmission error), Middle English nombir, Middle English nombredyd (past participle, transmission error), Middle English nombrye, Middle English nombur, Middle English noumbir, Middle English noumbur, Middle English nounbre, Middle English novmbre, Middle English nowmber, Middle English nowmbre, Middle English nowmbur, Middle English nowmbyr, Middle English nownber, Middle English numbir, Middle English–1500s noumbre, Middle English–1600s nombre, Middle English–1700s numbre, Middle English– number, 1500s–1600s nomber; Scottish pre-1700 nombair, pre-1700 nomber, pre-1700 nombre, pre-1700 nowmber, pre-1700 numbir, pre-1700 numbre, pre-1700 nwmbre, pre-1700 1700s– number.

β. late Middle English nowmer, late Middle English numer; Scottish pre-1700 nomer, pre-1700 nomyr, pre-1700 noumer, pre-1700 novmer, pre-1700 nowmer, pre-1700 nowmir, pre-1700 nowmyr, pre-1700 numer, pre-1700 nvmmer, pre-1700 nwmer, pre-1700 nwmyr, pre-1700 1800s– nummer.

Origin: Of multiple origins. Partly formed within English, by conversion. Partly a borrowing from French. Etymons: number n.; French nombrer.
Etymology: Partly < number n., and partly < Anglo-Norman nombrer, noumbrer, nounbrer, numbrer, etc., and Middle French nombrer (early 12th cent. in Old French in sense 1a as numbrer ; 1314 in sense ‘to enumerate’; a1525 in sense ‘to calculate’; French nombrer ) < classical Latin numerāre numerate v.
1.
a. transitive. To ascertain the number of (individual things or persons), to count. Also intransitive.For use with mass nouns, see sense 1c.
ΚΠ
α.
c1325 (c1300) Chron. Robert of Gloucester (Calig.) 1399 (MED) He bigan..to noumbri eche man.
a1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis (Fairf.) ii. 1769 (MED) It mihte noght be nombred, The folk which after was encombred Thurgh him.
a1398 J. Trevisa tr. Bartholomaeus Anglicus De Proprietatibus Rerum (BL Add.) f. 121v Tyme is noumbre and tale, noumbringe and tellinge, in alle þingis þat beþ I-noumbrid and I-toolde.
?a1425 Constit. Masonry (Royal 17 A.i) l. 571 in J. O. Halliwell Early Hist. Freemasonry in Eng. (1844) 33 Astronomy nombreth..Arsmetyk scheweth won thyng that ys another.
a1470 T. Malory Morte Darthur (Winch. Coll. 13) (1990) II. 888 Sir Galahad..saw so muche people in the stretys that he myght nat numbir hem.
a1475 (?a1430) J. Lydgate tr. G. Deguileville Pilgrimage Life Man (Vitell.) 19338 Thousandis mo than I kan nowmbre.
c1485 ( G. Hay Bk. Law of Armys (2005) 53 Nane coud nombre the grete multitude of peple, yat deid.
a1500 (c1340) R. Rolle Psalter (Univ. Oxf. 64) (1884) xxi. 17 Þai noumbird..all my banes.
1526 W. Bonde Pylgrimage of Perfection iii. sig. UUUiiv I was extended and drawen on the crosse so violently, that all the ioyntes and partes of my body myght haue ben nombred.
1629 in J. D. Marwick Rec. Convent. Royal Burghs Scotl. (1878) III. 284 That the magistrattis trye the lenth of the hesp and caus nomber the threids thairof.
1651 T. Hobbes Leviathan iii. xlii. 290 The Principall Person of the Assembly, whose office was to number the Votes.
1671 J. Milton Paradise Regain'd iii. 409 When thou stood'st up his Tempter to the pride Of numbring Israel. View more context for this quotation
1709 R. Steele & J. Addison Tatler No. 81. ⁋2 Prodigious Multitudes of People, which no Man could number.
1787 T. Jefferson Notes Virginia viii. 209 The census..the whole inhabitants having been sometimes numbered, and sometimes the tythes only.
1820 P. B. Shelley Prometheus Unbound iv. i. 144 Like a flock of sheep They pass before his eye, are numbered, and roll on.
a1862 H. T. Buckle Misc. Wks. (1872) I. 527 Mussulmans consider every attempt to number the people as a mark of great impiety.
1936 G. Greene in Spectator 14 Aug. 270/2 Serious films of the kind..could be numbered on the fingers of one hand.
1992 G. Hancock Sign & Seal iv. xii. 285 Sacrificing sheep and oxen that could not be told nor numbered for multitude.
β. Promptorium Parvulorum (Harl. 221) 360 Nowmeron, numero annumero.c1450 Alphabet of Tales (1905) II. 293 (MED) I am þe aungell off God sent for to nowmer þi fute-steppis.c1480 (a1400) St. Cecilia 404 in W. M. Metcalfe Legends Saints Sc. Dial. (1896) II. 379 Þai ma nocht nomeryt be, þat resawit þis halynes.a1500 in Anglia (1880) 3 324 (MED) A nonne enformyd a wenche..ffor to say oft the Aue Maria..numering the Juncturis of hir handdys.1539 in J. B. Paul Accts. Treasurer Scotl. (1907) VII. 154 Lettres to proclame wappin-schewing, and..to noumer the personis fensabill for weris.1573 in W. Mackay & H. C. Boyd Rec. Inverness (1911) I. 230 To nummer and tak compt of thame and all vther his grayth.
b. transitive. To compute, calculate, reckon, measure. Also intransitive. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > number > mathematics > calculate or solve [verb (transitive)]
rimeeOE
calcule1377
numbera1382
accounta1387
casta1400
calk1401
computate1449
suppute?a1475
reckona1513
to cast up1539
yield1542
supputate1555
practise?a1560
calculate1570
compute1579
work1582
quantulate1610
resolve1613
find1714
to work out1719
solve1737
to figure out1854
the world > relative properties > number > enumeration, reckoning, or calculation > number, calculate, or reckon [verb (transitive)]
rimeeOE
arimec885
atellc885
talec897
i-telle971
tellOE
readc1225
reckon?c1225
aima1375
numbera1382
denumber1382
accounta1393
casta1400
countc1400
umberc1400
ascribe1432
annumerate?a1475
to sum upa1475
annumbera1500
ennumber1535
reckon?1537
tally1542
compute1579
recount1581
rate1599
catalogize1602
to add up1611
suma1616
enumeratea1649
numerate1657
to run up1830
to figure out1834
figure1854
to count up1872
enumer1936
a1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) (1961) Lev. xxiii. 15 Ȝe sholen noumbre..fro þat oth.er day of þe woke..seuene wokys.
?c1475 Catholicon Anglicum (BL Add. 15562) f. 81 To Nowmyr, Calculare..Computare.
a1513 J. Irland Meroure of Wyssdome (1926) I. 98 To Daniel was reuelit the tyme and he nowmerit per ebdomadas.
1530 J. Palsgrave Lesclarcissement 644/2 I nombre, as an astronomer doth his thing by aulgorisme, je calcule.
1530 J. Palsgrave Lesclarcissement 644/2 Have you nombred the distaunce bytwene the sonne and the moone?
1579 L. Digges & T. Digges Stratioticos 1 To number anye summe nothing else it is, but to declare the value of everie Figure placed.
c1600 (?c1395) Pierce Ploughman's Crede (Trin. Cambr. R.3.15) (1873) 178 Merkes of marchauntes y-medled bytwene, Mo þan twenty and two twyes y-noumbred.
1609 J. Skene tr. Regiam Majestatem i. f. 36 Quhen he is fourtene ȝeares compleit or quhen he can number and tell silver.
1669 S. Sturmy Mariners Mag. iv. viii. 218 The half of the deg. and min. thus numbred together, will be the Elevation of the Pole.
1794 T. Taylor tr. Pausanias Descr. Greece III. 7 I was desirous of accurately numbering the interval of time from one Daedal festival to another.
c. transitive. To ascertain the amount or quantity of (something). Obsolete.
ΚΠ
a1425 (c1395) Bible (Wycliffite, L.V.) (Royal) (1850) Psalms lxxxix. 11 Who knew the power of thin ire; and durste noumbre [L. dinumerare] thin ire for thi drede?
c1450 J. Lydgate Ballade Our Lady (Sloane) 100 in Minor Poems (1911) i. 258 (MED) Gabriell With joie the grette þat may not be noumbrid.
c1460 Abraham & Isaac in N. Davis Non-Cycle Plays & Fragm. (1970) 40 (MED) Go and novmbre þe gravel in þe see.
1535 Bible (Coverdale) Gen. xli. F He left of nombrynge of it [sc. corn], for it coude not be nombred.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Antony & Cleopatra (1623) iii. ii. 17 Scribes, Bards, Poets, cannot Thinke speake, cast, write, sing, number: hoo, His loue to Anthony. View more context for this quotation
2.
a. transitive. To fix the number of; to reduce to a definite number; (now) esp. to make few in number; to bring near to a close. Usually in passive, esp. in a person's days are numbered.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > number > plurality > fewness > make few [verb (transitive)]
numberc1350
c1350 Psalter (BL Add. 17376) in K. D. Bülbring Earliest Compl. Eng. Prose Psalter (1891) cxlvi. 4 (MED) Our Lord..noumbreþ þe multitude of sterres.
c1384 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Douce 369(2)) (1850) Dan. v. 26 God hath noumbride thi rewme, and fulfilled it.
c1390 G. Chaucer Parson's Tale I. 218 God hath creat..no thyng with outen ordre, but alle thynges ben ordeyned and nombred.
c1425 (c1400) Prymer (Cambr.) (1895) 64 (MED) Þou hast noumbrid my steppis; but, lord, spare þou my synnes!
a1450 ( in J. Kail 26 Polit. Poems (1904) 5 (MED) Alle thyng is nombred in goddis sight, The leste tryp that euere ȝe trede.
a1500 tr. A. Chartier Traité de l'Esperance (Rawl.) (1974) 31 (MED) It is..vayne..to stryue with Him which noumbrith the sterres.
1584 R. Scot Discouerie Witchcraft v. v. 99 Man..hath his daies numbred.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Henry VI, Pt. 3 (1623) i. iv. 26 The Sands are numbred, that makes vp my Life. View more context for this quotation
1709 D. Manley Secret Mem. 131 How fanciful are the Works of Mortals! They also are numbered by the Days that Phoebus counts in his Solar Course.
1781 H. Downman Death of Caesar iii. v. 367 By th'eternal gods In their exalted sphere our days are numbered.
1816 W. Scott Antiquary III. iii. 55 My days are numbered—your mother-in-law is in the extremity of age, and, if I see her not to-day, we may never meet.
1847 C. Brontë Jane Eyre II. x. 253 The month of courtship had wasted: its very last hours were being numbered.
1883 Daily Tel. 10 Nov. 5/3 We are told by croakers that the days of fox-hunting are numbered in these sporting islands.
1944 Sun (Baltimore) 22 July 2/1 Adolf Hitler's days are numbered. His purge of 1944 is something from which his party and his army will never recover.
1984 Oxf. Illustr. Hist. Britain viii. 457 The successful use of screw-propulsion on smaller ships was numbering the days of the sailing fleet.
b. transitive. To collect (a body of soldiers, etc.) up to a certain number. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > space > relative position > arrangement or fact of being arranged > state of being gathered together > gather together [verb (transitive)] > assemble (people or animals) > up to a certain number
number1382
1382 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) 2 Chron. ii. 2 And he noumbrede seuenty thousand of men berynge in schulderis.
1533 J. Bellenden tr. Livy Hist. Rome (1901) I. ii. xvii. 195 Quhen þir consulis war nowmerand þare legiouns,..Comperit afore þame ane huge pepill desiring peace.
1611 Bible (King James) 1 Kings xx. 25 Number thee an armie, like the armie that thou hast lost. View more context for this quotation
1661 T. Ross tr. Silius Italicus Second Punick War vii. 210 This done, his Army number'd in the Plain, To's Camp upon the Hills, with Joy, again The old Dictatour, makes a safe Retreat.
c. transitive. More generally: to enumerate, to reckon; to mention, list. In later use chiefly with up. Also intransitive. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > number > enumeration, reckoning, or calculation > number, calculate, or reckon [verb (transitive)] > as a series
rimeeOE
telleOE
number?a1425
minutea1770
?a1425 tr. Catherine of Siena Orcherd of Syon (Harl.) (1966) 33 (MED) These ben þe vertues, and oþire manye mo, whiche þou miȝtest not noumbre, whiche comen of mannys loue to his neiȝbore.
R. Misyn tr. R. Rolle Fire of Love 97 (MED) No þinge emonge all oþer þat may be nowmbyrde of clarkis..may vs socur so mikyll.
c1440 (?a1400) Morte Arthure 2658 They are nowmerde fulle neghe and namede in rollez, Sexty thowsande forsothe.
a1470 T. Malory Morte Darthur (Winch. Coll. 13) (1990) II. 1088 Than sir Bors de Ganys cam..and he was numbir[de] he smote downe twenty knyghtes.
1531 J. Bellenden tr. H. Boece Hyst. & Cron. Scotl. I. i. 62 To nowmer thair genelogy first fra Brutus.
1590 C. Marlowe Tamburlaine: 2nd Pt. sig. H8 So from Arabia desart..Came forty thousand warlike foot and horse, Since last we numbred to your Maiesty.
1601 R. Johnson tr. G. Botero Trauellers Breuiat 18 The quantities of ladders, bridges, shot, powder, and other furnitures following so royal an armie, what pen can number?
1686 tr. J. Chardin Trav. Persia 252 Relicks..among which they number up the Veronique.
1765 G. Colman Phormio v. ii. 616 Need I, Demipho, Number up each particular; and say How good a wife I've been?
1775 R. B. Sheridan Rivals v. i. 83 When you number up the many true delights it has deprived you of–let it not be your least regret, that it lost you the love of one—who would have follow'd you in beggary through the world!
1850 H. F. Gould New Poems 34 As busy Memory numbered up The honey-drops and gall, He in the waters dashed her cup To wash it free of all.
1871 R. H. Hutton Ess. (1877) I. 4 If..you numbered up the acts of trust.
d. transitive. In passive. To be of a certain number; to amount to, or be equal to, in number. Also with of. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > number > enumeration, reckoning, or calculation > number, calculate, or reckon [verb (transitive)] > amount to or total
makeOE
amountc1350
be?c1425
draw1425
numbera1450
numbera1586
to sum up1597
give1634
mount1639
tantamount1659
compute1667
muster1810
total1859
subtotal1906
a1450 Partonope of Blois (Univ. Coll. Oxf.) (1912) 3050 People he had in the feelde, Whiche were nombred of spere and sheelde An hundred thousand.
1472–3 Rolls of Parl. VI. 36/2 His Purs and xxii li. of money nombred..they robbed.
a1500 (c1400) Vision of Tundale (Adv.) (1843) 2220 He mad colagys and chyrchys mony That nomburd wer to fowre and fowrty.
a1500 (a1460) Towneley Plays (1897–1973) 66 (MED) Now are they nowmbred of myghty men moo then ccc thousand.
1508 Golagros & Gawane (Chepman & Myllar) sig. av Thay drive on the da deir be dalis & doun And of the nobillest be name noumerit of nyne.
c1540 J. Bellenden tr. H. Boece Hyst. & Cron. Scotl. iii. xv. f. xxxvi/1 The army of Caratak at this tyme wes noumerit to xl.M. men.
a1578 R. Lindsay Hist. & Cron. Scotl. (1899) I. 400 All maner of men..quhilk gaif thair mustaris and was fund numberit be the heraldis fyftie thowsand men.
1629 J. Gaule Panegyrick 43 in Practique Theories Christs Predict. Had I..Tongues and Lips numbred to those Hands of the Poets Briareus.
3.
a. transitive. To count or class among persons or things of a specified category. Usually with among, in, or with.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > kind or sort > generality > condition or state of being inclusive > include [verb (transitive)] > count in or include among
reckona1382
numberc1384
accountc1390
musterc1425
counta1530
adnumber?1531
marshal1559
recount1564
calculate1643
c1384 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Douce 369(2)) (1850) Deeds i. 17 Judas..was noumbrid in [a1425 L.V. among] vs.
c1475 ( Surg. Treat. in MS Wellcome 564 f. 19 (MED) Oþere diuers bonys þer ben in þe heed þat ben not noumbrid among þese as þe neþir chekeboon & alle þe teeþ on boþe sidis.
1493 Petronylla (Pynson) 27 She was acceptyd so in the lordys sight, To be noumbryd one of the maydyns fyue.
c1520 M. Nisbet New Test. in Scots (1905) III. Acts i. 17 Judas that..was novmerit amang vs.
1549 Bk. Common Prayer (STC 16267) Mattyns f. iiv Make them to be noumbred with thy sainctes.
1600 W. Shakespeare Midsummer Night's Dream iii. ii. 67 Henceforth be neuer numbred among men. View more context for this quotation
1624 P. Massinger Bond-man iv. ii. sig. H2 Happy those times, When Lords..numbred Their seruants almost equall with their Sonnes.
1652 J. Gaule Πυς-μαντια xxvi. sig. l2v To these dreamers, we may number those, who give a faith of divinity to the vaticinations of madmen.
1719–20 J. Swift Let. to Young Gentleman (1721) 9 If..he be any where too obscure..it ought to be numbred among his Omissions.
1753 T. Smollett Ferdinand Count Fathom I. i. 4 An Englishwoman, who, after having been five times a widow in one campaign, was..numbered among the baggage of the allied army.
1782 J. H. St. J. de Crèvecoeur Lett. from Amer. Farmer iii. 50 Formerly they were not numbered in any civil lists of their country, except in those of the poor.
1817 P. B. Shelley Laon & Cythna ix. xxix. 207 Let sense and thought..be numbered not Among the things that are.
1884 Manch. Examiner 20 Feb. 4/7 The nation which is proud to number him among her sons.
1912 ‘Saki’ Unbearable Bassington ii. 33 A colleague whose House had the embarrassing distinction of numbering Comus among its inmates.
1985 J. N. Isbister Freud i. 13 Freud numbered in his relations two rabbis.
b. intransitive. To rank or be included with or among (others).
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > kind or sort > generality > condition or state of being inclusive > be included in something [verb (intransitive)] > among others
to make one1542
number1702
count1850
1702 N. Rowe Ambitious Step-mother (ed. 2) i. i. 1 When we number with the living, We say the most we can.
1749 P. Francis tr. Horace Odes ii. 139 Virtue, to Crouds a Foe profest, Disdains to number with the Blest.
1792 S. Whyte Epit. on Old John in Coll. Poems 142 He liv'd approv'd, was honour'd at his death, And in the end shall number with the bless'd.
1815 J. Cottle Messiah xx. 367 Fain would thy David number with the dead!
1864 Ld. Tennyson Aylmer's Field in Enoch Arden, etc. 85 And tho' thou numberest with the followers Of One who cried ‘leave all and follow me’.
a1974 L. Durrell Soliloquy Hamlet in Coll. Poems (1985) 77 The king who stiffens in a shirt of blood, Too good, too grave to number with the crumbs, Can leave an incubus to this winter castle.
1997 Economist 25 Jan. (Siemens Nixdorf Advertising section) 70/2 The Bank of Ireland numbers among the leading financial institutions of the Emerald Isle.
4.
a. transitive. To assign or attach a number to (a thing), typically to indicate a position in a series; spec. to mark or distinguish with a numerical symbol.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > indication > marking > marking to identify > be distinctive mark on [verb (transitive)] > put identifying mark on > with number
numbera1393
a1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis (Fairf.) vii. 1122 (MED) The Signe which is nombred eighte Is Scorpio.
a1513 J. Irland Meroure of Wyssdome (1965) II. 20 Distingand & numerand the artiklis of the faith eftir the nowmer of the apostlis.
1593 T. Fale Horologiographia f. 12 Number the residue of the lines in their place as they follow in order.
1651 T. Hobbes Leviathan iv. xlvi. 374 Men divide a Body in their thought, by numbring parts, of it, and in numbring those parts number also the parts of the Place it filled.
1678 J. Moxon Mech. Exercises I. vi. 100 These Inches are numbred from one end of the Rule to the other.
1732–3 B. Franklin in Pennsylvania Gaz. 11 Jan. The Counterfeiters, with all their care and exactness, have entirely omitted numbering their Bills; at least none of those are number'd which are seized.
1802 T. Jefferson Let. 18 Apr. in Writings (1984) 1104 Each of the 9. letters is then numbered according to the place it would hold if the 9. were arranged alphabetically.
1849 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. I. iii. 360 The houses were not numbered. There would indeed have been little advantage in numbering them.
1877 Act 40 & 41 Vict. c. 60 §3 Every canal boat..shall be lettered, marked, and numbered in some conspicuous manner.
1907 J. Conrad Secret Agent ii. 17 One..bore the number 9 and the other was numbered 37.
1955 G. Gorer Exploring Eng. Char. xiii. 231 Respondents were asked, if they agreed with more than one statement, to number them in order of their importance.
1993 Canad. Living May (Insert) 88–89 Remove all baseboards, shoe mouldings (number them so you can replace them in the same sequence), radiator grates and floor vents.
b. transitive. to number off (originally and chiefly Military): to assign a number to (each of a group of individuals), esp. for the purpose of splitting a group into smaller ones; (also, intransitive of the individuals concerned) to call out in sequence the numbers to which their particular places in a line, etc., assign them.
ΚΠ
1844 Athenaeum 7 Dec. 1115/2 The corps formed one entire regiment, numbered off by battalions.
1846 M. B. Betham-Edwards Diary 25 Dec. in Southwestern Hist. Q. 4 (1936) 231 Our line had been numbered off—one, two—with orders that number two reserve its fire while number one fired, and while reloading, number two fire.
1893 N.E.D. at Countermarch sb. It is now superseded by ‘changing ranks’, in which the whole simply face about, and number off anew, the rear rank then becoming the front.
1932 T. E. Lawrence tr. Homer Odyssey x So I numbered off my mail-clad followers and divided them into two sections, each with its leader.
1937 D. M. Jones In Parenthesis v. 121 After you've numbered-off you can wait ten minutes in the driven rain.
1990 C. Francome Colin Clown's Party Bk. 59 The children stand around the leader in a semi-circle and are numbered off until the last two become Jack and then King or Queen.
c. transitive. To set down in a numerical series. Obsolete. rare.
ΚΠ
1846 G. Grote Hist. Greece II. i. xviii. 33 Codrus is numbered as the last king of Athens.
5.
a. transitive. Scottish in early use. To count out or pay (down) money. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > payment > pay money or things [verb (transitive)] > count or weigh out in payment
reckonOE
tell?a1300
weigh1382
number1474
1474 in W. Fraser Stirlings of Keir (1858) 248 Williame of Striueline..to pay and content to me..the soume of tua hundreth marcis of gud and usual money..in ane hale soume..in money novmeryt and tauld..upon the hie altar of the paroch kyrk of Logy.
1481 in J. Robertson Illustr. Topogr. & Antiq. Aberdeen & Banff (1857) III. 463 The soume of fourty pundis..to be tald and nowmeryt befor notabil witnes.
1494 Charter Edinb. Reg. House No. 583 The mone beand nowmerit & lokkit in ane boxis & deliuerit to the positoure.
1502 Will of Henry Heed (P.R.O.: PROB. 11/13) f. 153v lli in Redy money nombred.
1521 Boyds of Penkill Family Papers No. 3 3 Nov. Thane it sal be lefull to the sad Johne..to nowmer the sad sowme of sevine scor of merks apone the sad hie altare.
1574 in R. Renwick Abstr. Protocols Town Clerks Glasgow (1897) IV. 22 Williame Muir..numbrit, tald and delyverit to Walter Dowglas..the sowme of ane hundreyth libris.
1596 J. Dalrymple tr. J. Leslie Hist. Scotl. (1895) II. 237 The mony promiset him..is numbret.
1671 J. Milton Samson Agonistes 1478 His ransom..shall willingly be paid And numberd down. View more context for this quotation
1725 in Hist. MSS Comm.: Rep. MSS Duke of Portland (1901) VI. 140 in Parl. Papers (Cd. 676) XXXVI. i. 1 The seller carries home to the merchant's house what goods they had bargained for, where he has immediately his money numbered down.
b. transitive. More generally: to check, control, or verify the number of; to count or tell over. Also intransitive. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
1535 Bible (Coverdale) 1 Sam. xiv. 17 And whan they nombred, beholde, Ionathas & his wapen bearer was not there.
a1640 P. Massinger City-Madam (1658) v. iii. 26 Let my brother number His beads devoutly.
1692 J. Dryden Eleonora 13 Anchises look'd not with so pleas'd a Face In numb'ring o'er his future Roman Race.
1725 A. Pope tr. Homer Odyssey III. xiii. 262 Then on the sands he rang'd his wealthy store, The gold, the vests, the tripods, number'd o'er.
1785 W. Cowper Task v. 425 To wear out time in numb'ring to and fro The studs that thick emboss his iron door.
1813 P. B. Shelley Queen Mab iv. 57 Or thou delightst In numbering o'er the myriads of thy slain.
1845 N. P. Willis Dashes at Life with Free Pencil iii. 153 Oh, Heaven! with what new value do I now number over your adorable graces of person!
1886 R. L. Stevenson Kidnapped iv. 37 I numbered over before him the points on which I wanted explanation.
c. transitive. To expend (time) thoughtfully. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > source or principle of life > [verb (transitive)] > apportion one's days with care
number1535
1535 Bible (Coverdale) Psalms lxxxix. 5 O teach vs to nombre oure dayes, that we maye applie our hertes vnto wyszdome.
1665 R. Brathwait Comment Two Tales Chaucer 198 The Remainder of his Hours henceforth was to number his Daies.
1756 T. Amory Life John Buncle I. 255 Vouchsafe we beseech thee, to direct, sanctify and govern both our hearts and bodies in the ways of thy laws..and so teach us to number our days.
1860 J. W. Warter Sea-board & Down II. 133 Days of this life's pilgrimage spared to me in mercy to number wisely.
d. transitive. To appoint or allot to a specified fate. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > will > necessity > fate or destiny as determining events > predestine or predetermine [verb (transitive)] > one's lot
ordainc1384
fortune1390
allot1566
design1593
number1611
1611 Bible (King James) Isa. lxv. 12 Therefore will I number [L. numerabo] you to the sword. View more context for this quotation
1890 R. L. Stevenson Ballads 77 For here was the nation assembled, and there were the ovens anigh, And out of a thousand singers nine were numbered to die.
e. transitive. To apportion, divide. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > possession > giving > distributing or dealing out > distribute or deal out [verb (transitive)] > divide into shares > divide and share out
dealc1000
shiftc1000
to-partc1325
partc1330
departa1340
divide1377
portion?a1400
dressc1410
parcel1416
skiftc1420
describe1535
repart1540
sever1548
disparklea1552
enterparten1556
share1577
to share out1583
repartitec1603
dispart1629
parcena1641
cavel1652
partage1660
split1674
snack1675
partition1740
scantle1749
appart1798
whack1819
divvy1877
number1887
cut1928
1887 W. Morris tr. Homer Odyssey I. x. 175 Then my well-greaved fellows I numbered [Gk. ἠρίθμεον] into two companies.
1977 W. S. Merwin Compass Flower ii. 29 How many hands of timepieces must be..clicking at a given moment numbering insects into machines to be codified.
6.
a. transitive. To equal in number, amount to (a specified total).
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > number > enumeration, reckoning, or calculation > number, calculate, or reckon [verb (transitive)] > amount to or total
makeOE
amountc1350
be?c1425
draw1425
numbera1450
numbera1586
to sum up1597
give1634
mount1639
tantamount1659
compute1667
muster1810
total1859
subtotal1906
a1586 King Hart l. 42 in W. A. Craigie Maitland Folio MS (1919) I. 256 Thir folk..Quhilk nummerit ane milȝon and weill mo.
1836 J. H. Ingraham Lafitte I. ii. x. 185 The pirates numbered about fifty, and the force of the Americans was nearly equal.
1881 E. B. Tylor Anthropol. i. 7 It appears that the distinct languages known number about a thousand.
1883 Manch. Guardian 22 Oct. 5/2 The crew and passengers numbered 33.
1910 Encycl. Brit. I. 892/1 The arches [of the Colosseum] numbered eighty.
1920 C. Carswell Open Door! i. i. 15 In Glasgow alone the registered converts numbered over thirty-two thousand.
1994 New Scientist 2 Apr. 7/1 The rare Amur tiger, which numbered 400 in 1990, is now down to 250 animals.
b. intransitive. To be equal in number with. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > number > enumeration, reckoning, or calculation > enumerate, reckon, or calculate [verb (intransitive)] > amount or be equal to
goeOE
risec1175
amount1399
mountc1400
to come to ——?a1425
draw1425
reach1431
to run to ——1528
surmount1551
to come unto ——1562
arise1594
to equivalize account1647
tell1671
sum1721
reckon1783
count1819
number1842
to add up1850
to add up to1853
to work out1867
total1880
to tot up1882
1842 Ld. Tennyson Two Voices in Poems (new ed.) II. 138 A wife,..Whose troubles number with his days.
c. transitive. To include or comprise in a number; to have or comprise (a specified number of things or persons).
ΘΚΠ
the world > relative properties > wholeness > mutual relation of parts to whole > incorporation or inclusion > incorporate or include [verb (transitive)] > a number of persons or things
number1867
1867 C. Thirlwall Remains III. 450 It would show not only that the Anglican Communion numbered so many Bishops.
1872 J. Yeats Growth Commerce 91 Kafsah numbered in its environs..200 castles.
1881 E. A. Freeman Sketch Subj. Lands Venice 323 It is said that..Otranto numbered twenty-two thousand inhabitants.
1902 B. T. Washington Up from Slavery vi. 105 The night-school at Hampton, which started with only twelve students, now numbers between three and four hundred.
1959 J. Barzun House of Intellect v. 136 The country still numbers a great many excellent teachers who know their own minds and speak them clearly.
1989 I. Frazier Great Plains iv. 50 The Teton Sioux soon numbered seven bands.
7. transitive. To have lived, or to live (a specified number of years). Also figurative: to have been in existence (a specified length of time). Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > source or principle of life > age > [verb (transitive)]
beOE
number1590
tell1605
1590 G. Peele Polyhymnia 9 Thirty-three [years] she numbereth, in her throne, That long..I pray May number many to these thirty-three.
a1616 W. Shakespeare All's Well that ends Well (1623) iv. v. 81 Of as able bodie as when he number'd thirty. View more context for this quotation
1657 G. Wharton Wks. (1683) 49 The Greek Church numbereth from the Creation to Christ's Æra, 5508 complete years..The year 1657, current of the Christian Æra.
1753 S. Richardson Hist. Sir Charles Grandison II. xviii. 193 A fine piece of flattery, Lucy, to a man who numbered near three times her years.
a1800 W. Cowper Yardley-Oak in W. Hayley Life & Posthumous Writings Cowper (1804) III. 409 My birth (Since which I number three-score winters past).
1826 J. F. Cooper Last of Mohicans II. xi. 192 They were all aged..but one..had numbered an amount of years, to which the human race is seldom permitted to attain.
1839 C. Darwin in R. Fitzroy & C. Darwin Narr. Surv. Voy. H.M.S. Adventure & Beagle III. xxi. 535 This colony,..from its very foundation then numbered only three-and-thirty years!
1898 T. Hardy Wessex Poems 117 She numbered near on sixty years, And passed as elderly.
8. transitive. To issue (a book) in numbers. Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
society > communication > printing > publishing > publish [verb (transitive)] > publish in numbers
number1781
1781 G. Crabbe Library 8 A Folio-number once a week; Bibles with cuts and comments thus go down, E'en light Voltaire is number'd through the town.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2003; most recently modified version published online June 2022).
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