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Countdown from 100 to 0

Magic 8 Ball

upload_2015-5-6_19-28-50.webp
 
Nice. I have been as far west as Colorado, east to Rhode Island, south to Florida to visit a friend, and naturally, south to Louisiana where my mother and sister live. See the mitten? I am slightly south of that grayish part where the ring finger ends.
 
The four square lay outs weren't this big where I went to elementary school.
About the size of one of these squares.
four-square-corbismkb.jpg


4
 
ONE in different languages (Old English ān)
Reconstructed proto-language: | *TIK |
Indo-european | *OIN-, *OIW-, *OIK- |, | *SEM- |

Sanskrit |
1-sanskrit.gif
EKA
|
1-sanskrit_bis.gif
ekaḥ (m) / ekā (f) / ekam (n)

Proto-Hellenic | *HEMS (< sems) |
Greek, Attic | 'EIΣ, MIA, 'EN HÊS (m), MIA (f), HÉN (n) |
Latin | VNVS, -A |
Archaic Latin | *ŒNVS, -A |, | *OINOS, -A |

Italian, Spanish uno; Romanian, French, and Catalan un; Provençal uns; Portuguese um; Romansh in; Sardinian únu.
Old Celtic | OINO |
Breton unan; Welsh un; Irish a haon (cardinal), amháin (thing), duine (person).
Old Germanic | AINAZ |
Dutch een; German eins; Danish and Norwegian en, et; Swedish ett; Icelandic einn.
Old Slavic | JEDINU, -A, -0 |
Russian один odÕn; Czech and Polish jeden; Slovenian êna.
Proto Indo-Iranian | *AIWAS |
Persian یک yek; Hindi एक ek.

Old Chinese (pron.) | iêt |
Chinese 一 . 幺 yāo is used as a replacement for in series of digits such as phone numbers, room numbers, etc... to prevent confusion between similar sounding words.
Proto-Semitic | *HAD |; | 'IShT |
Semitic root | WHD | or | ?HD | (? = glotal stop)
Ancient Egyptian [w'.-] ua-; Akkadian
1-cuneiform.gif
ishte'n
; Punic
1-punic.gif
e'hd
Arabic واحِد wa:hid; Hebrew אחת 'aHat; Maltese: wiehed; Amharic and.
Turkish bir.
Mayan hun.
Nahuatl .
Suomi yksi.
Zulu (u-ku)nye.



HIDDEN ROOTSThe roots of the word one (un-, sim-, prin-, cen-) are hidden in the following words: inch (from Lat. uncia), onion, ounce, primal, primate, primitive, primrose, prince, recent, simple, simulate, sincere (from Lat. sincerus meaning "clean, pure, sound", derived from the Indo-European roots ‘sem’ and ‘ker’, the underlying meaning of which is: 'of one growth', hence 'pure, clean'), single, unanimous, unicorn, uniform, unify, union, unique, unit, universe; alone, any, lonely, only, none. In French: ensemble, oignon, premier, printemps, sanglier, semblable, sincère. In Spanish: centolla, centollo ('spider-crab', from Celtic *kintuollos, the largest one < *kĭntu-, first, and *ollos, big). Gaulish person names: Cintullus, Cintugnatos, 'first born' (< *kĭntu-, first one; cognates: Lat. re-cens 'new', Gr. kainos 'young, new').
Number Facts: number 0 up to number 500 and more

1


 
Zero

The term 'zero hours' is not defined in legislation, but is generally understood to be a employment contract between an employer and a worker, which means the employer is not obliged to provide the worker with any minimum working hours, and the worker is not obliged to accept any of the hours offered.
 

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