@lizzard @gunchleoc @sarahbecan Like French, Danish has relics of a base-20 system when it comes to name numbers.
In danish 60 is "tresindstyve" which literally means "three times twenty", and 80 is "firsindstyve" which means "four times twenty". That one is similar in French.
But then… 50, 70 and 90 are tricky.
@lizzard @gunchleoc @sarahbecan
… 50 is "halvtredsindstyve" which literally means "half three times twenty". But like in germanic languages, they count backwards when it comes to numbers and times. So basically what it literally means if "half of the third time twenty" (halv = half / tred = three / sinds = times / tyve = twenty).
70 is then "half of the fourth time time twenty" (halvfjerdsindstyve) and 90 is "half of the fifth time twenty" (halvfemsindstyve).
@lizzard @gunchleoc @sarahbecan
… 50 is "halvtredsindstyve" which literally means "half three times twenty". But like in germanic languages, they count backwards when it comes to numbers and times. So basically what it literally means if "half of the third time twenty" (halv = half / tred = three / sinds = times / tyve = twenty).