In written languages, an ordinal indicator is a character, or group of characters, following a numeral denoting that it is an ordinal number, rather than a cardinal number. Historically these letters were "elevated terminals", that is to say the last few letters of the full word denoting the ordinal form of the number displayed as a superscript. Probably originating with Latin scribes, the character(s) used vary in different languages.
◌ª | ◌º | |
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Ordinal indicator (feminine | masculine) | |
In Unicode |
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Different from | |
Different from |
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In English orthography, this corresponds to the suffixes ‑st, ‑nd, ‑rd, ‑th in written ordinals (represented either on the line 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th or as superscript 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th). Also commonly encountered in Romance languages are the superscript or superior (and often underlined) masculine ordinal indicator, º, and feminine ordinal indicator, ª. In formal typography, the ordinal indicators ª and º are distinguishable from other characters.[1]
The practice of underlined (or doubly underlined) superscripted abbreviations was common in 19th-century writing (not limited to ordinal indicators in particular, and extant in the numero sign №), and was found in handwritten English until at least the late 19th century (e.g. first abbreviated '1st' or 1st).[2]
Usage
editIn Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, and Galician, the ordinal indicators º and ª are appended to the numeral depending on whether the grammatical gender is masculine or feminine. The indicator may be given an underline but this is not ubiquitous. In digital typography, this depends on the font: Cambria and Calibri, for example, have underlined ordinal indicators, while most other fonts do not.
Examples of the usage of ordinal indicators in Italian are:
- 1º, primo; 1ª, prima "first"
- 2º, secondo; 2ª, seconda "second"
- 3º, terzo; 3ª, terza "third"
Galician also forms its ordinal numbers this way,[3] while Asturian follows a similar system where ᵘ is used for the masculine gender, ª for the feminine gender and º for the neuter gender.[4]
In Spanish, using the two final letters of the word as it is spelled is not allowed,[5] except in the cases of primer (an apocope of primero) before singular masculine nouns, which is not abbreviated as 1.º but as 1.er, of tercer (an apocope of tercero) before singular masculine nouns, which is not abbreviated as 3.º but as 3.er, and of compound ordinal numbers ending in primer or tercer. For instance, "twenty-first" is vigésimo primer before a masculine noun, and its abbreviation is 21.er. Since none of these words are shortened before feminine nouns, their correct forms for those cases are primera and tercera. These can be represented as 1.ª and 3.ª. As with other abbreviations in Spanish, the ordinal numbers have a period ".", which is placed before the indicator. Portuguese follows the same method.[6]
Origins
editThe practice of indicating ordinals with superscript suffixes may originate with the practice of writing a superscript o to indicate a Latin ablative in pre-modern scribal practice. This ablative desinence happened to be frequently combined with ordinal numerals indicating dates (as in tertio die [written iiio die] "on the third day" or in Anno Domini years, as in anno millesimo [...] ab incarnatione domini nostri Iesu Christi [written an ͂ Mo [...] dm ͂i nri ih ͂u xp ͂i or similarly] "in the thousandth [...] year after the incarnation of our lord Jesus Christ").[citation needed]
The usage of terminals in the vernacular languages of Europe derives from Latin usage, as practised by scribes in monasteries and chanceries before writing in the vernacular became established. The terminal letters used depend on the gender of the item to be ordered and the case in which the ordinal adjective is stated, for example primus dies ('the first day', nominative case, masculine), but primo die ('on the first day', ablative case masculine), shown as Io or io. As monumental inscriptions often refer to days on which events happened (e.g., "he died on the tenth of June"), the ablative case is generally used: Xo (decimo) with the month stated in the genitive case. Examples:[7]
- Io (primo) die Julii "on the first day of July"
- Xo decimo
- XXo vicensimo
- Lo quinquagesimo
- Co centesimo
- Mo millesimo
Design
editThe masculine ordinal indicator º may be confused with the degree sign ° (U+00B0), which looks very similar and which is provided on the Italian and Latin American keyboard layouts. It was common in the early days of computers to use the same character for both.[citation needed] The degree sign is a uniform circle and is never underlined. The masculine ordinal indicator is the shape of a lower-case letter o, and thus may be oval or elliptical, and may have a varying line thickness.
Ordinal indicators may also be underlined. It is not mandatory in Portugal[8] nor in Brazil,[9][10][11] but it is preferred in some fonts to avoid confusion with the degree sign.[1]
Also, the ordinal indicators should be distinguishable from superscript characters. The top of the ordinal indicators (i.e., the top of the elevated letter a and letter o) must be aligned[1] with the cap height of the font. The alignment of the top of superscripted letters a and o will depend on the font.
The line thickness of the ordinal indicators is always proportional to the line thickness of the other characters of the font. Many fonts just shrink the characters (making them thinner) to draw superscripts.
Encoding
editThe Romance feminine and masculine ordinal indicators were adopted into the 8-bit ECMA-94 encoding in 1985 and the ISO 8859-1 encoding in 1987 (both based on DEC's Multinational Character Set designed for VT220), at positions 170 (xAA) and 186 (xBA), respectively. ISO 8859-1 was incorporated as the first 256 code points of ISO/IEC 10646 and Unicode in 1991. The Unicode characters are thus:
- U+00AA ª FEMININE ORDINAL INDICATOR (ª)
- U+00BA º MASCULINE ORDINAL INDICATOR (º)
There are superscript versions of the letters ⟨a⟩ and ⟨o⟩ in Unicode; these are different characters and should not be used as ordinal indicators.
The majority of character sets intended to support Galician, Portuguese, and/or Spanish have those two characters encoded in hexadecimal as follows:
Character set | ª | º |
---|---|---|
DEC Multinational, ISO-8859-1, ISO-8859-15, CP 819, CP 923, BraSCII, Commodore Amiga, RISC, CP 1004, Windows CP 1252 | AA | BA |
IBM CP 437, IBM CP 860, CP 220, Atari ST, IBM CP 850, IBM CP 859, IBM CP 898 | A6 | A7 |
IBM CP 037, IBM CP 256, IBM CP 275, IBM CP 282, IBM CP 283, IBM CP 284, IBM CP 500, IBM CP 831, IBM CP 924, IBM CP 1047, IBM CP 1073, IBM CP 1078, IBM CP 1079 | 9A | 9B |
T.61, Adobe Standard, NextStep Multinational | E3 | EB |
HP Roman-8, Ventura International | F9 | FA |
MacIntosh Roman | BB | BC |
Wang | DC | EC |
ABICOMP | DC | DD |
Typing
editPortuguese and Spanish keyboard layouts are the only ones on which the characters are directly accessible through a dedicated key: º for "º" and ⇧ Shift+º for "ª". On other keyboard layouts, these characters are accessible only through a set of keystrokes (see Unicode input).
Similar conventions
edit- Some languages use superior letters as a typographic convention for abbreviations. For example, in pre-20th-century handwritten letters and records, English featured abbreviations like "answd" for "answered"[12] and "Jos" for "Joseph".[13]
- Spanish uses superscript letters and ordinal indicators in some abbreviations,[14] such as V.º B.º for visto bueno "approved"; n.º for número "number"; D.ª for doña (an honorific); M.ª for María (a Spanish name frequently used in compounds like José M.ª); and adm.ora for administradora "administrator". The superscript characters and indicators are always preceded by a period. Traditionally, they have been underlined, but this is optional and less frequent today. Portuguese forms some abbreviations in the same manner; for example: Ex.mo for Excelentíssimo (an honorific), L.da for Limitada (Ltd.), and Sr.ª for Senhora (Ms.).
- English has borrowed the No. abbreviation from the Romance-language word numero, which itself derives from the Latin word numero, the ablative case of the word numerus "number".[15] This is sometimes written as No, with the superscript o optionally underlined, or sometimes with the ordinal indicator. In this case the ordinal indicator would simply represent the letter o in numero; see numero sign.
- In English, superscript abbreviations were common.
Sometimes the characters for the ordinal indicators (º and ª) are used for one of these purposes, which may be considered a misuse if other characters are preferred for these contexts.
Ordinal dot
editIn Basque, Serbo-Croatian, Czech, Danish, Estonian, Faroese, Finnish, German, Hungarian, Icelandic, Latvian, Norwegian, Slovak, Slovene, Turkish, among other languages, a period or full stop is written after the numeral. In Polish, the period can be omitted if there is no ambiguity whether a given numeral is ordinal or cardinal. The only exceptions are variables in mathematics (k+1-szy – (k+1)st).[16] Writing out the endings for various cases, as sometimes happens in Czech and Slovak, is considered incorrect and uneducated. Should a full stop follow this dot, it is omitted.
The Serbian standard of Serbo-Croatian (unlike the Croatian and Bosnian standards) uses the dot in role of the ordinal indicator only past Arabic numerals, while Roman numerals are used without a dot.
There is a problem with autocorrection, mobile editors, etc., which often force a capital initial letter in the word following the ordinal numbers.
Other suffixes
editEnglish
edit- -st is used with numbers ending in 1 (e.g. 1st, pronounced first)
- -nd is used with numbers ending in 2 (e.g. 92nd, pronounced ninety-second)
- -rd is used with numbers ending in 3 (e.g. 33rd, pronounced thirty-third)
- As an exception to the above rules, numbers ending with 11, 12, and 13 use -th (e.g. 11th, pronounced eleventh, 112th, pronounced one hundred [and] twelfth)
- -th is used for all other numbers (e.g. 9th, pronounced ninth).
- One archaic variant uses a singular -d for numbers ending in 2 or 3 (e.g. 92d or 33d)
In 19th-century handwriting, these terminals were often elevated, that is to say written as superscripts (e.g. 2nd, 34th). With the gradual introduction of the typewriter in the late 19th century, it became common to write them on the baseline in typewritten texts,[17] and this usage even became recommended in certain 20th-century style guides. Thus, the 17th edition of The Chicago Manual of Style states: "The letters in ordinal numbers should not appear as superscripts (e.g., 122nd not 122nd)", as do the Bluebook[18] and style guides by the Council of Science Editors,[19] Microsoft,[20] and Yahoo.[21] Two problems are that superscripts are used "most often in citations" and are "tiny and hard to read".[18] Some word processors format ordinal indicators as superscripts by default (e.g. Microsoft Word[22]). Style guide author Jack Lynch (Rutgers) recommends turning off automatic superscripting of ordinals in Microsoft Word, because "no professionally printed books use superscripts".[23]
French
editFrench uses the ordinal indicators er and re for the number 1, depending on gender (masculine 1er – premier; feminine 1re – première). It uses e for higher numbers (for instance 2e – deuxième). French also uses the indicators d and de for the alternative second ordinal number (masculine 2d – second; feminine 2de – seconde). In plural, all these indicators are suffixed with an s: ers (1ers – premiers), res (1res – premières), es (2es – deuxièmes), ds (2ds – seconds), des (2des – secondes).
Although regarded as incorrect by typographic standards, longer forms are in wide usage: ère for feminine 1 (1ère – première)), ème for numbers starting at 2 (for instance 2ème – deuxième), nd and nde for the alternative second ordinal number (2nd – second; 2nde – seconde)
These indicators use superscript formatting whenever it is available.
Catalan
editThe rule in Catalan is to follow the number with the last letter in the singular and the last two letters in the plural.[24] Most numbers follow the pattern exemplified by vint '20' (20è m sg, 20a f sg, 20ns m pl, 20es f pl), but the first few ordinals are irregular, affecting the abbreviations of the masculine forms. Superscripting is not standard.
Dutch
editUnlike other Germanic languages, Dutch is similar to English in this respect: the French layout with e used to be popular, but the recent spelling changes now prescribe the suffix ‑e. Optionally ‑ste and ‑de may be used, but this is more complex: 1ste (eerste), 2de (tweede), 4de (vierde), 20ste (twintigste), etc.[25]
Finnish
editIn Finnish orthography, when the numeral is followed by its head noun (which indicates the grammatical case of the ordinal), it is sufficient to write a period or full stop after the numeral: Päädyin kilpailussa 2. sijalle "In the competition, I finished in 2nd place". However, if the head noun is omitted, the ordinal indicator takes the form of a morphological suffix, which is attached to the numeral with a colon. In the nominative case, the suffix is ‑nen for 1 and 2, and ‑s for larger numerals: Minä olin 2:nen, ja veljeni oli 3:s 'I came 2nd, and my brother came 3rd'. This is derived from the endings of the spelled-out ordinal numbers: ensimmäinen, toinen, kolmas, neljäs, viides, kuudes, seitsemäs, etc..
The system becomes rather complicated when the ordinal needs to be inflected, as the ordinal suffix is adjusted according to the case ending: 3:s (nominative case, which has no ending), 3:nnen (genitive case with ending ‑n), 3:tta (partitive case with ending ‑ta), 3:nnessa (inessive case with ending ‑ssa), 3:nteen (illative case with ending ‑en), etc.. Even native speakers sometimes find it difficult to exactly identify the ordinal suffix, as its borders with the word stem and the case ending may appear blurred. In such cases, it may be preferable to write the ordinal word entirely with letters and particularly 2:nen is rare even in the nominative case, as it is not significantly shorter than the full word toinen.
Irish
editNumerals from 3 up form their ordinals uniformly by adding the suffix -ú: 3ú, 4ú, 5ú, etc. When the ordinal is written out, the suffix adheres to the spelling restrictions imposed by the broad/slender difference in consonants and is written -iú after slender consonants; but when written as numbers, only the suffix itself (-ú) is written. In the case of 4 (ceathair), the final syllable is syncopated before the suffix, and in the case of 9 (naoi), 20 (fiche), and 1000 (míle), the final vowel is assimilated into the suffix.
Most multiples of ten end in a vowel in their cardinal form and form their ordinal form by adding the suffix to their genitive singular form, which ends in -d; this is not reflected in writing. Exceptions are 20 (fiche) and 40 (daichead), both of which form their ordinals by adding the suffix directly to the cardinal (fichiú and daicheadú).
When counting objects, dó (2) becomes dhá and ceathair (4) becomes ceithre.
As in French, the vigesimal system is widely used, particularly in people's ages. Ceithre scór agus cúigdéag – 95.
The numbers 1 (aon) and 2 (dó) both have two separate ordinals: one regularly formed by adding -ú (aonú, dóú), and one suppletive form (céad, dara). The regular forms are restricted in their usage to actual numeric contexts, when counting. The latter are also used in counting, especially céad, but are used in broader, more abstract senses of "first" and "second" (or "other"). In their broader senses, céad and dara are not written as 1ú and 2ú, though 1ú and 2ú may in a numeric context be read aloud as céad and dara (e.g., an 21ú lá may be read as an t-aonú lá is fiche or as an chéad lá is fiche).
Cardinal | Ordinal | |
---|---|---|
1 | a h-aon | aonú (1ú) or céad |
2 | a dó | dóú (2ú) or dara |
3 | a trí | tríú (3ú) |
4 | a ceathair | ceathrú (4ú) |
5 | a cúig | cúigiú (5ú) |
6 | a sé | séú (6ú) |
7 | a seacht | seachtú (7ú) |
8 | a hocht | ochtú (8ú) |
9 | a naoi | naoú (9ú) |
10 | a deich | deichiú (10ú) |
20 | fiche or scór | fichiú (20ú) |
30 | triocha | triochadú (30ú) |
40 | daichead, ceathracha or dhá scór | daicheadú or ceathrachadú (40ú) |
50 | caoga | caogadú (50ú) |
60 | seasca or trí scór | seascadú (60ú) |
70 | seachtó | seachtódú (70ú) |
80 | ochtó or ceithre scór | ochtódú (80ú) |
90 | nócha | nóchadú (90ú) |
100 | céad | céadú (100ú) |
1000 | míle | míliú (1000ú) |
Russian
editOne or two letters of the spelled-out numeral are appended to it (either after a hyphen or, rarely, in superscript). The rule is to take the minimal number of letters that include at least one consonant phoneme. Examples: 2-му второму /ftɐromu/, 2-я вторая /ftɐraja/, 2-й второй /ftɐroj/ (note that in the second example, the vowel letter я represents two phonemes, one of which [/j/] is consonant).
Swedish
editThe general rule is that :a (for 1 and 2) or :e (for all other numbers, except 101:a, 42:a, etc., but including 11:e and 12:e) is appended to the numeral. The reason is that -a and -e respectively end the ordinal number words. The ordinals for 1 and 2 may however be given an -e form (förste and andre instead of första and andra) when used about a male person (masculine natural gender), and if so they are written 1:e and 2:e. When indicating dates, suffixes are never used. Examples: 1:a klass "first grade (in elementary school)", 3:e utgåvan "third edition", but 6 november. Furthermore, suffixes can be left out if the number obviously is an ordinal number, example: 3 utg. "3rd ed". Using a full stop as an ordinal indicator is considered archaic, but still occurs in military contexts; for example: 5. komp "5th company".
Representation as prefix
editNumbers in Malay and Indonesian are preceded by the ordinal prefix ke-; for example, ke-7 "seventh". The exception is pertama, which means "first".
Numbers in Filipino are preceded by the ordinal prefix ika- or pang- (the latter subject to sandhi; for example, ika-7 or pam-7 "seventh"). The exception is una, which means "first".
In Chinese and Japanese, an ordinal number is prefixed by 第 dì / dai; for example: 第一 "first", 第二 "second".
In Korean, an ordinal number is prefixed by 제 je or suffixed by 번째 beonjjae; for example: 제1 "first", 2번째 "second".
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b c "Microsoft typography—Character design standards". Microsoft Corporation. 9 June 2022.
Note: Traditionally in Portuguese the ordinal characters should contain the underline. The underline helps avoid confusion between the masculine ordinal and the degree character. This is important at low resolution, such as the screen, when both characters are very similar in size and shape.
- ^ Max Harold Fisch; Christian J. W. Kloesel (1989). "Essay on the Editorial Method". Writings of Charles S. Peirce: 1879–1884. Vol. 4. p. 629. ISBN 978-0-2533-7201-7.
Peirce also regularly used the nineteenth-century calligraphic convention of double underlining superscript portions of abbreviations such as Mr or 1st.
- ^ "Números ordinais e partativos". Wikidog.xunta.es.
- ^ Gramática de la Llingua Asturiana (PDF) (in Asturian) (3rd ed.). Academia de la Llingua Asturiana. 2001. ISBN 84-8168-310-8.
- ^ Ordinales, Royal Spanish Academy.
- ^ Sobrescritos sublinhados em ordinais, Ciberdúvidas da Língua Portuguesa.
- ^ Kennedy's Shorter Latin Primer, 1992, London, pp.28-9
- ^ Sobrescritos sublinhados em ordinais, Ciberdúvisas da língua portuguesa
- ^ Abreviatura da Palavra Número, Abreviar.com.br
- ^ Numerais ordinais, Museu Língua Portuguesa
- ^ Numerais ordinais, Todo Estudo
- ^ Commonly used abbreviations, Papers of the War Department, 1784-1800
- ^ First Name Abbreviations
- ^ "Abreviaturas". Diccionario panhispánico de dudas (in Spanish) (2.ª (versión provisional) ed.). Real Academia Española y Asociación de Academias de la Lengua Española. Retrieved 16 July 2024.
- ^ "no.". AskOxford.com Oxford Dictionaries. Oxford University Press. Archived from the original on 17 March 2006. Retrieved 10 July 2018.
- ^ "wyraz n-ty". Poradnia językowa PWN (in Polish).
- ^ e.g. Max Harold Fisch, Christian J. W. Kloesel, "Essay on the Editorial Method", in Writings of Charles S. Peirce: 1879-1884, vol. 4 (1989), p. 629: "In all MSS in this period, Peirce inscribed "st," "nd," "rd," and "th" in the superscript position: for convenience's sake, they are on the line in typewritten pieces. In published pieces the ordinals are superscripted to conform to Peirce's style; "2nd" and "3rd" are emended to "2nd" and "3rd". When Peirce typed abbreviated ordinals on the line, these mechanical exceptions attributable to his typewriter have been changed to superscript ordinals."
- ^ a b Butterick, Matthew (4 October 2012). "Typography for Lawyers - Ordinals". Retrieved 4 October 2012.
Bluebook rule 6.2(b)(i) (19th ed. 2010)
- ^ McMillan, Victoria E. (2011). Writing Papers in the Biological Sciences. Bedford / St. Martin's. p. 79. ISBN 978-0-3126-4971-5. Retrieved 4 October 2012.
- ^ Microsoft Manual of Style (4th ed.). Microsoft Press. 2012. p. 316. ISBN 978-0-7356-6979-6. Retrieved 4 October 2012.
- ^ Barr, Chris; Yahoo! (2010). The Yahoo! Style Guide. Macmillan. p. 359. ISBN 978-0-3125-6984-6. Retrieved 4 October 2012.
- ^ "Automatic formatting results", Word Help, Office, Microsoft.
- ^ Lynch, Jack (30 April 2007). The English Language: A User's Guide. Focus Publishing/R. Pullins Company. pp. 131, 213]. ISBN 978-1-5851-0185-6.
Lynch, Jack (28 January 2011). "Guide to Grammar and Style — M". Rutgers University. Archived from the original on 5 August 2012. Retrieved 4 October 2012.[...] ordinal numbers [...] no professionally printed books use superscripts [...]
- ^ "5. La grafia de les abreviacions" (PDF), Gramàtica de la llengua catalana, IEC, p. 391.
- ^ "Taaladvies - Taaladvies.net".
External links
edit- "number words", Woordenlijst (in Dutch).
- Windows keyboard layouts
- Apple keyboard layouts