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My friend is doing spanish homework and he needs to know what family numbers are called in spanish.

2006-10-02 06:44:02 · 11 answers · asked by ? 2 in Society & Culture Languages

uno, once, veinte y uno, treinta y uno,...(1, 11, 21, 31...)
dos, doce, veinte y dos, treinta y dos,...(2, 12, 22, 32...)

What is the specific phrase in spanish for these groups of numbers(in english it's family numbers).

2006-10-02 06:49:52 · update #1

11 answers

The odd numbers are "impares" and the even numbers "pares" in Spanish. I've never heard of family numbers, but what you've got there is a series of odd numbers "una serie de numeros impares" and a series of even numbers "una serie de numeros pares". The term for the numbers you list is "cardinals", i.e. the number in its simplest form. If we say first, eleventh, etc. we are using "ordinals". Nobody ever told me about family numbers when I was learning Spanish. Thank goodness!

2006-10-02 07:16:59 · answer #1 · answered by Doethineb 7 · 0 0

I have never heard of this in English, let alone in Spanish. Are you sure the term "family numbers" is used widely?

If I were describing these numbers in English, I would probably circumlocute: "Numbers that have the same digit in the ones place." I don't know how to say "ones place" in Spanish, but somebody on Yahoo! Answers will, and then you'll have the answer.

2006-10-02 10:51:59 · answer #2 · answered by drshorty 7 · 0 0

new york is everyday as "new york" because of the fact some time past a everyday human beings hero (Johnny Appleseed) planted a single seed in direction of the city. Then, in a wierd warp in area-time, a boy named Jack planted a seed he believed to be magical in a similar spot. In what remains considered a marveling organic and organic progression, the two seeds fused mutually on a molecular point. After an staggering rain, the seed hybrid grew into an apple 300ft tall and approximatively 330ft huge. The strangest component being the absence of a tree. it style of feels the apple became thoroughly everyday, different than it grew immediately from the floor with its own roots like a beanstalk of a few type. for some destiny years, human beings might bypass to the city and look up on the impossible fruit and picture "it is a ordinary apple". After a mutually as human beings began pertaining to the city itself as "new york". yet then, 1943 Oct eleventh, some thing unusual got here approximately. because of the fact the city laid to take a seat back, the nighttime as quickly as lower back upon them, there became a stunning flash of pink mild. The flash lasted for just about 4-5 seconds. no person is definite what brought about the flash, yet as quickly because it became over the apple had only disappeared. not purely had it vanished, the floor it had grown from had closed as though it have been in no way there. some say the apple had grown so super it created some style of fruity supernova and collapsed in on itself in a black hollow. some say the extraterrestrial beings to blame for the dying of the dinosaurs got here lower back and destroyed the apple besides. We would in no way understand precisely what got here approximately that nighttime, yet one component is for particular. That became a super-*** apple.

2016-10-18 08:55:00 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Perhaps it is

Odd Numbers (any number not divisible by 2 such as 1, 3,5,7,9,11, 13...) and
Even Numbers (any number divisible by 2 such as 2,4,6,8,10,12,14,16...).

But I don't know the spanish words for "odd numbers" and "even numbers"

2006-10-06 05:22:02 · answer #4 · answered by tranquil 6 · 0 0

The correct name is ...NÚMEROS CARDINALES, can be in number or the word spelling.

1 casa
Una casa

And for the other group of numbers like 1o 2o 3o we call it NÚMEROS ORDINALES

1o Casa
Primera casa

2006-10-02 18:38:55 · answer #5 · answered by Sortilegio 2 · 1 0

im in spanish study hall right now and my teacher told me that they are called "cardinal numbers" u can translate that into spanish.

2006-10-02 06:52:59 · answer #6 · answered by sarah 2 · 1 0

i don't understand ur question can u be more specific? i kno spanish so i can helpu.

2006-10-02 06:45:43 · answer #7 · answered by Hopeicouldhelp 4 · 0 0

like del cero al veinte .....?

2006-10-02 06:54:06 · answer #8 · answered by babygurl89 1 · 0 0

I don't remember learning that

2006-10-02 06:51:31 · answer #9 · answered by dreamer 3 · 0 0

I had never heard of "family numbers"!!!!!!!!!!!

2006-10-02 17:27:00 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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