English

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Interjection

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huit

  1. A cry to sled dogs to start moving.
    • 1978, Neville Peat, Snow Dogs, page 18:
      'Huit, Clara, huit! Come on, Osman! Good dogs — huit!'
    • 1996, Kevin Walton, ‎Rick Atkinson, Of Dogs and Men: Fifty Years in the Antarctic (page 92)
      I put "Harvey" and "Eccles", the strongest and slowest dogs, on a long trace and fastened them to each side of the sledge to provide extra braking power. With a cry of "Up Dogs! Huit!" my team and I began []

Catalan

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Catalan numbers (edit)
80[a], [b]
 ←  7 8 9  → 
    Cardinal (Valencian): huit
    Cardinal (Central): vuit
    Ordinal (Valencian): huité
    Ordinal (Central): vuitè
    Ordinal (Latinate): octau
    Ordinal abbreviation (Valencian):
    Ordinal abbreviation (Central):
    Ordinal abbreviation (Latinate): 8u
    Multiplier: òctuple

Pronunciation

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Numeral

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huit m or f

  1. (Valencia) Alternative form of vuit (eight)

Noun

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huit m (plural huits)

  1. (Valencia) Alternative form of vuit (eight)

Finnish

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Etymology

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Possibly from the same root as huitoa, huitaista, referring to fast movement. Compare also huut.

Pronunciation

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  • IPA(key): /ˈhui̯t/, [ˈhui̯t̪]
  • Rhymes: -uit
  • Hyphenation(key): huit

Adverb

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huit

  1. an intensifier used in some idioms
    Huit hiiteen siitä!
    Out of my sight!
    Se on jossain huit helvetissä.
    It is somewhere in the back of beyond.

Synonyms

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See also

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Further reading

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French

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French numbers (edit)
80[a], [b], [c]
 ←  7 8 9  → 
    Cardinal: huit
    Ordinal: huitième
    Ordinal abbreviation: 8e, (now nonstandard) 8ème
    Multiplier: octuple

Alternative forms

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Etymology

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Inherited from Middle French huyct, from Old French uit, from Latin octō, from Proto-Indo-European *oḱtṓw.

The h- was added in Middle French to avoid confusion with vit when the letters u and v were not distinguished; compare the same in huile, etc. That huit does not undergo initial liaison is in fact due to a general rule for numerals (compare un, onze), not to a historically aspirated onset.

Pronunciation

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Numeral

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huit (invariable)

  1. eight

Derived terms

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Descendants

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  • Garifuna: widü
  • Louisiana Creole: wit

See also

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Playing cards in French · cartes à jouer (layout · text)
             
as deux trois quatre cinq six sept
             
huit neuf dix valet dame roi joker

Further reading

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Norman

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Norman cardinal numbers
 <  7 8 9  > 
    Cardinal : huit

Etymology

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From Old French uit, from Latin octō, from Proto-Indo-European *oḱtṓw.

Pronunciation

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Numeral

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huit

  1. (Jersey, Guernsey) eight

Derived terms

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Noun

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huit m (plural huits)

  1. (Jersey) figure-of-eight knot
  NODES
Note 1