Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
sixth
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Remove ads
English
| 60 | ||
| ← 5 | 6 | 7 → |
|---|---|---|
| Cardinal: six Ordinal: sixth Abbreviated ordinal: 6th Latinate ordinal: senary Adverbial: six times Multiplier: sixfold Latinate multiplier: sextuple Distributive: sextuply Germanic collective: half-dozen, sixsome Collective of n parts: sextuplet, hextuplet Greek or Latinate collective: hexad Greek collective prefix: hexa- Latinate collective prefix: sexa- Fractional: sixth Elemental: sextuplet, hextuplet Greek prefix: hexa- Number of musicians: sextet Number of years: sexennium | ||
Alternative forms
Etymology
From earlier sixt, from Middle English sixte, from Old English siexta, from Proto-Germanic *sehstô. By surface analysis, six + -th (ordinal suffix).
Pronunciation
Adjective
sixth (not comparable)
- The ordinal form of the number six.
- 1611, The Holy Bible, […] (King James Version), London: […] Robert Barker, […], →OCLC, Genesis 1:31:
- And * God ſaw euery thing that hee had made : and behold, it was very good. And the euening and the moꝛning were the ſixth day.
- And God saw everything that he had made: and behold, it was very good. And the evening and the morning were the sixth day.
- 1892, Western Association of Writers, Sayings and Doings of the Sixth General Meeting, Jones Brothers Publishing Company, pages 271–272:
- Dr. Ridpath, in his usual happy manner, thanked the Executive Committee and the various members of the Association who had so earnestly cooperated with him in the work of the Sixth Annual Meeting now drawing to a close.
- 1976, L[ilian] H[amilton] Jeffery, “Kylon and Drakon”, in Archaic Greece: The City-States, c. 700-500 b.c., New York, N.Y.: St. Martin’s Press, →LCCN, →OCLC, section II (Central and Northern Greece), subsection 7 (Athens and Attica), page 86:
- [T]he law codes drafted in Athens in the late seventh and early sixth centuries were the work of individuals, Drakon and then Solon.
- 2007 August 21, Kareem Fahim, “Presidential Candidate Blames Killings on Newark Sanctuary Policy”, in The New York Times, archived from the original on 30 August 2019:
- On Monday, the federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency placed a similar detainer on Melvin Jovel, 18, who on Sunday was the sixth person to be arrested in the case.
- 2011 February 25, Peter Dicken, Global Shift, Sixth Edition: Mapping the Changing Contours of the World Economy, Guilford Press, page xi:
- As this sixth edition is published in 2011, it is exactly 25 years since the publication of the first edition in 1986. That, in itself, is a very sobering thought, for all kinds of reasons.
Derived terms
Translations
ordinal form of the number six — see also 6th
|
Noun
sixth (plural sixths)
- (not used in the plural) The person or thing in the sixth position.
- One of six equal parts of a whole.
- Synonym: ⅙
- (music) The interval between one note and another, five notes higher in the scale; for example C to A, a major sixth, or C to A flat, a minor sixth.
Derived terms
- augmented sixth
- augmented sixth chord
- Australian sixth
- diminished sixth
- French augmented sixth chord
- French sixth
- German augmented sixth chord
- German sixth
- Italian augmented sixth chord
- Italian sixth
- Japanese sixth
- lower sixth
- major sixth
- minor sixth
- Revenge of the Sixth
- upper sixth
Translations
person or thing in sixth place
|
one of six equal parts of a whole
|
interval
|
Verb
sixth (third-person singular simple present sixths, present participle sixthing, simple past and past participle sixthed)
- (informal, nonstandard, rare) To divide by six, equivalent to multiplying a denominator by six.
Translations
Remove ads
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads