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Einn

Einn is a term used in Icelandic primarily as the masculine nominative singular form of the cardinal numeral one. In Icelandic, the feminine and neuter forms are ein and eitt, and the numeral typically agrees with the gender of the noun it modifies. Einn is used to count items and to indicate a single object, as in einn maður (one man) or einn dagur (one day). It can also appear as an indefinite pronoun in some contexts to mean “one” in a general sense.

Linguistically, einn is an ancient form within the North Germanic branch and is cognate with similar words

In modern Icelandic usage, einn is common in numerical expressions and often appears alongside determiners or

See also: One (number); Icelandic language; Germanic languages.

in
related
languages.
Its
etymology
traces
back
to
Proto-Germanic
*ainaz,
related
to
English
one,
German
eins,
Dutch
een,
and
the
Scandinavian
forms
en/ein.
The
Icelandic
form
has
preserved
characteristics
that
set
it
apart
from
some
of
its
modern
counterparts
in
neighboring
languages.
nouns
as
part
of
standard
counting
and
measurement.
Outside
Icelandic,
the
term
is
primarily
of
interest
in
historical
or
comparative
linguistic
contexts,
rather
than
in
contemporary
everyday
usage.