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2006-07-25 00:07:00 · 4 answers · asked by Caroline M 1 in Education & Reference Trivia

4 answers

The Latin explanation is correct, but it's slightly more complex than that. "Numero" actually means "in number".

The basic form of the word in Latin is "numerus". "Numero" is the "ablative case" form. The ablative form was used here because that fit the usage English writers needed when they introduced the form into English in the 17th century (in expressions of the sort "men, in number three").

A couple of notes on this form & how to use it:

1) The numero sign used to always use a RAISED (or "superscript") O. (Typewriters could not handle this very well, unless you wanted to manually move the carriage up and down. But wordprocessing, personal computing make it much easier.)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/numero_sign...

This use of a superscript at the end is another indicator that it is the letter stands for the case ENDING, rather than, say, the second letter of the word. (The practice of abbreviating a word by its first letter or two plus the case ending is ancient. For example, in the early church --by the 2nd century-- copies of the Greek New Testament would abbreviate the divine names by using the first letter or two followed by the case ending, with a line over the whole to mark it as an abbreviation.)
http://www.skypoint.com/~waltzmn/nominas...

2) Even though the abbreviation is borrowed from the Latin, you should never SAY the Latin word when you see it. That's just an unusual habit in English -- to use Latin abbreviations to stand for English words.

In the same way, when you see "e.g." you say "for example"; for "i.e." say "that is", for "viz." say "namely"; for "cf." say "compare"; and for "etc." say "and so forth". (Many other European languages have equivalent abbreviations, but base them on their OWN language.)
See: http://www.randomhouse.com/wotd/index.pp...
and list - http://list-of-latin-phrases.area51.ipup...

2006-07-25 00:12:37 · answer #1 · answered by cmhurley64 6 · 3 2

Despite the earlier complex answer, the English language is rich in French as well as Latin. And the abbreviation for number comes straight from the French numero rather than the Latin as suggested.

2006-07-25 00:38:14 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

the latin word 'numero' meaning number...thus 'no'

2006-07-25 00:11:32 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

know

2006-07-25 00:11:38 · answer #4 · answered by renae8003 3 · 0 0

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