Glossary entry

German term or phrase:

der wievielte

English translation:

how-manieth

Added to glossary by cogito92
Dec 30, 2002 06:31
21 yrs ago
4 viewers *
German term

der wievielte

Non-PRO German to English Other
"Der wievielte war er nach der zweiten Etappe?"
"Der wievielte ist es heute?"
Is there an eng. equivalent to "Wievielte" in question form to the declaratory: "He was in second place..." "Today is the 14th"
Proposed translations (English)
4 +1 how-manieth
4 +10 unfortunately not
5 +2 Yes, but ...
5 +2 (zilch)
5 ranked
3 Langenscheidt

Proposed translations

+1
1 hr
Selected

how-manieth

There are some poeple who evidently use this form (see Google URL), even though the word cannot be found in Webster's or any other dictionary available to me. Since there seems to be no other way of expressing this, maybe one should use it after all.

First Presbyterian Pulpit
... They hear again (for who knows the how-manieth time) what the scriptures have all-along
said about the Messiah, then Jesus says, "You are witnesses of these ...
www.presbyterianwarren.com/resemble.html - 17k - Cached - Similar pages

WirelessAdvisor.com Forums - Alltel vs. Verizon in AZ
... have chnaged and I had my final moment with them when I went to their store a few
weeks ago and was treated so rudely, for the I don't know how manieth time. ...
www.wirelessadvisor.com/waforums/ messageview.cfm?catid=5&threadid=2127 - 101k - Cached - Similar pages

Classics-L: Re: It is me versus I am it
... I'm having fun over on the Lingtyplist where the current subject is -- ordinal
interrogatives. They exist. The how-manieth posting? Greek: po/stos. ...
omega.cohums.ohio-state.edu:8080/hyper-lists/ classics-l/01-03-01/0552.html - 6k - Cached - Similar pages


Peer comment(s):

agree Egmont
4 days
Something went wrong...
4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer. Comment: "Hello Alexander, thanks for your response and particularly for your references. Knowing that there isn't an equivalent, I never even thought of checking Google. I whole-heartedly agree that "how-manieth" should be used since it is useful and the meaning is self evident. Csaba Szilagyi"
+10
14 mins

unfortunately not

Too bad you can't say "The whichth?" or the "The howmanieth?"
Peer comment(s):

agree writeaway : there is no fixed term for this in English
15 mins
agree Elvira Stoianov
17 mins
agree Susan Geiblinger
29 mins
agree Ellen Zittinger : what position, what time, what place and so on
56 mins
agree Raluca Ion (X)
1 hr
agree jerrie
1 hr
agree schnuppe (X) : ....you can say" how manieth"...but I wouldn't
4 hrs
agree Ron Stelter
5 hrs
agree Сергей Лузан
14 hrs
agree Fumiko Murray
2680 days
Something went wrong...
+2
48 mins

Yes, but ...

You can say "the how manyth?" but this is jokey, and also rather awkward. Of your examples, the first has to be something like "What place was he in after the second stage?".

The second would often be "What day is it today?", but this has the disadvantage of being ambiguous - maybe it asks the day of the week, rather than the date. The jokey "It´s the howmanyth today?" is sometimes used here to avoid this, when the asker fails to think of another solution, like "What´s the date today?"

--------------------------------------------------
Note added at 2002-12-30 08:41:23 (GMT)
--------------------------------------------------

Some people say \"What´s the dateth?\" - \"Es ist der wievielte?\". Not me, though.
Peer comment(s):

agree Barbara Lawson
11 hrs
agree Сергей Лузан : "What place was he in after the second stage?" sounds quite reasonable.
14 hrs
Something went wrong...
+2
2 hrs

(zilch)

I discussed this question rather extensively in a linguistics course (all the non-native speakers came out with "the howmanieth" as part of their regular English usage)... no there is nothing in the standard system of English.
There are even more ways to ask for an ordinal in German, like when talking about marriages:
"Zum wievielten Mal ist sie verheiratet?"
"In Spanien lebte sie mit ihrem wievielten Mann?"
(I'm always thinking of Zsa Zsa Gabor here)
Ordinal question words are not really common; they're *not* there in English, French, or Portuguese, but they are in German, Czech ('kolikaty?'), and Latin ('quotus? quotumus?').
I think someone is going to write a paper about ordinal questions...
Peer comment(s):

agree Csaba Ban : ordinal question words also exist in Hungarian and Turkish, and all (if I am correct) Slavic languages
1 hr
Oh yes Hungarian I forgot, that's where Zsa Zsa Gabor entered the picture... :)
neutral Chris Rowson (X) : I have heard English and American people using "how manyth". I don´t normally use it myself, but I might have done occasionally.
6 hrs
agree Fumiko Murray : In Japanese and Chinese ordinal question is a vatal part of the language. I understand there also is the form in Finishe.
2680 days
Something went wrong...
8 hrs

Langenscheidt

wievielt I. interr. Adverb: zu wievielt wart ihr? how many of you were there?;
II. Adjektiv: der (die, das) wievielte ...? which ...?; das wievielte Stück ißt du jetzt? how many pieces have you eaten already?; den Wievielten haben wir heute? what's the date today?; zum wievielten Male? how many times?; als wievielter ist er ins Ziel gekommen? what place did he come?; am wievielten August hat er Geburtstag? when in August is his birthday?

© 2001 Langenscheidt
Something went wrong...
13 hrs

ranked

not quite 1:1 to "wievielte", but this is how I´d put it:

How was he ranked at the end of the second stage?

What's the date today?
Something went wrong...
Term search
  • All of ProZ.com
  • Term search
  • Jobs
  • Forums
  • Multiple search