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Enne

Enne is not a common stand-alone term in English. It is most often encountered as a fragment of the Greek-derived combining form ennea-, meaning nine. In English, the combining form is typically rendered as ennea- or enne-, and it appears in several related terms that refer to groups of nine or ninefold structures.

Prominent uses include Ennead, a group of nine, most famously the Great Ennead of Egyptian mythology, a

In broader scholarly and cultural contexts, enne- appears primarily as a prefix indicating nine, rather than

See also: ennea-, Greek numerals, ennead, enneagram, enneagon, ennehedron.

classical
constellation
of
nine
deities
centered
in
Heliopolis.
Enneagram
refers
to
a
nine-pointed
figure
used
in
various
spiritual,
psychological,
and
mathematical
contexts;
the
prefix
ennea-
combines
with
gramma,
meaning
writing
or
diagram,
to
describe
the
nine-point
diagram.
Enneagon
is
a
nine-sided
polygon;
while
correct,
it
is
far
less
common
in
modern
usage
than
nonagon,
the
term
that
has
become
more
widespread
in
everyday
mathematics.
Enneahedron
(or
enneAhedron)
denotes
a
nine-faced
polyhedron,
though
such
terms
are
rare
outside
geometric
discourse.
as
an
independent
word.
The
term
Ennead
also
extends
to
literary
and
philosophical
discussions
about
groups
of
nine,
beyond
mythology.
Because
English
usage
favors
nonagon
over
enneagon
and
non-technical
references
over
ennea-
forms,
instances
of
enne-
tend
to
occur
mainly
in
technical
vocabulary,
historical
texts,
or
discussions
of
Greek
numerals.