Nm 1:39 sexaginta duo millia septingenti.
sixty-two thousand, seven hundred.
| # | Latin | Gloss | Grammar Tag |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | sexaginta | sixty | ADJ.INDECL |
| 2 | duo | two | ADJ.NOM.PL.M |
| 3 | millia | thousands | NOUN.ACC.PL.N |
| 4 | septingenti | seven hundred | ADJ.NOM.PL.M |
Syntax
Numerical Expression: sexaginta duo millia septingenti functions as a nominal counting phrase expressing a total quantity.
Head Term: millia serves as the central counting noun, modified by the compound numeral sexaginta duo.
Appositional Addition: septingenti provides the additional hundreds that complete the number, with an implied masculine plural noun such as “men” supplied by context.
Clause Type: The phrase stands as a numerical statement without an explicit finite verb, typical in census summaries.
Morphology
- sexaginta — Lemma: sexaginta; Part of Speech: numeral adjective; Form: indeclinable cardinal numeral; Function: modifies millia as part of the compound number; Translation: sixty; Notes: This numeral remains unchanged in form and contributes the tens component of the count.
- duo — Lemma: duo; Part of Speech: numeral adjective; Form: nominative plural masculine cardinal numeral; Function: part of the compound numeral modifying millia; Translation: two; Notes: Agrees with an implied masculine plural noun that is understood in the census context.
- millia — Lemma: mille; Part of Speech: noun; Form: accusative plural neuter used as a substantive numeral; Function: head of the numerical phrase indicating thousands; Translation: thousands; Notes: When plural, mille behaves as a noun and typically governs a genitive of the counted entity, which is understood here.
- septingenti — Lemma: septingenti; Part of Speech: numeral adjective; Form: nominative plural masculine cardinal numeral; Function: adds the remaining hundreds to the total; Translation: seven hundred; Notes: The masculine plural form points to an implied masculine plural counted noun in the surrounding narrative context.