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Cardinal: tizenkettő, tizenkét Nominal: tizenkettes Ordinal: tizenkettedik Day of month: tizenkettedike A.o.: tizenkettedszer, tizenkettedjére Adverbial: tizenkétszer Multiplier: tizenkétszeres Distributive: tizenkettesével Fractional: tizenketted Number of people: tizenketten |
tizenkét
The numeral két (“two”) and the adjective kis (“small, little”) can only stand adjectively, before a noun (e.g. két alma (“two apples”) and kis alma (“a small apple”)). If they were to occur on their own (possibly also inflected), predicatively, or in reference to a whole noun phrase, the terms kettő (“two”) and kicsi (“small”) must be used instead: Csak kettő van (“There are only two”), Csak kicsi van (“There is a small one only.”) The same applies to compound numerals like tizenkét and tizenkettő (“twelve”). In terms of distribution, két and kis are like English sick (sick people ~ két/kis alma) while kettő and kicsi resemble ill (they are ill ~ csak kettő/kicsi van). The longer forms are definitely broader in use as they may also occur adjectively, whether for emphasis or as a form of colloquialism. As a rule of thumb, the short variants (két, kis) never stand on their own.