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Definition of three number from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

three

number
 
/θriː/
 
/θriː/
Idioms
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  1. 3
    • There are only three cookies left.
    • three of Sweden’s top financial experts
    • Ten people were invited but only three turned up.
    • Can you lend me three dollars?
    • a three-month contract
    • Look at page three.
    • Three and four is seven.
    • Three threes are nine.
    • I can't read your writing—is this meant to be a three?
    • The bulbs are planted in threes or fives (= groups of three or five).
    • We moved to America when I was three (= three years old).
    • Shall we meet at three (= at three o'clock), then?
    Word OriginOld English thrīe (masculine), thrīo, thrēo (feminine), of Germanic origin; related to Dutch drie and German drei, from an Indo-European root shared by Latin tres and Greek treis.
Idioms
in twos and threes
  1. two or three at a time; in small numbers
    • People arrived in twos and threes.
the three Rs
  1. (old-fashioned) reading, writing and arithmetic, thought to be the most important parts of a child’s education
See three in the Oxford Advanced American DictionarySee three in the Oxford Learner's Dictionary of Academic English
perspective
noun
 
 
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