What is another word for thirty-eight?

Pronunciation: [θˈɜːtiˈe͡ɪt] (IPA)

Thirty-eight is a number that falls between thirty-seven and thirty-nine. It can be written in several different ways using a variety of synonyms. For example, thirty-eight may be referred to as 2 score minus 2, XXVIII in Roman numerals, or as a sum of two prime numbers, 19+19. Other expressions for thirty-eight include "the number after thirty-seven," "a number divisible by 2 and 19," or "the 18th even number." In the context of telling time, thirty-eight minutes after an hour can be expressed as "twenty-two minutes before the next hour." Regardless of the notation, thirty-eight remains the same quantitatively, but the choice of synonyms can add a unique perspective to its description.

What are the paraphrases for Thirty-eight?

Paraphrases are restatements of text or speech using different words and phrasing to convey the same meaning.
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  • Independent

    • Cardinal number
      38th, 380, .38, 38.0, 38,000.
    • Adjective
      83, 38th, 83rd.
    • Noun, singular or mass
      38th.
  • Other Related

    • Cardinal number
      38.
    • Adjective
      38.
    • Noun, singular or mass
      38.

What are the hypernyms for Thirty-eight?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

What are the opposite words for thirty-eight?

Thirty-eight is a numerical term representing the quantity or value of 38. There are no direct antonyms for this word, as it is a specific and unique value. However, some possible antonyms could include lower numbers such as one or ten, or higher numbers such as one hundred or one thousand. Additionally, antonyms could also refer to negative values such as negative thirty-eight. It is important to note that antonyms are words with opposite meanings to a given word, and for a numerical value such as thirty-eight, it may not fit neatly into this classification.

What are the antonyms for Thirty-eight?

Famous quotes with Thirty-eight

  • I've been close to Bette Davis for thirty-eight years - and I have the cigarette burns to prove it.
    Henry Fonda
  • That's why I made a comeback in 1988. I knew there were chances of not making it, but I didn't want to end up at sixty years old and say I should have tried when I was thirty-eight.
    Guy Lafleur
  • I came to Christ when I was thirty-eight. That transformed my life.
    Jennifer O'Neill
  • For the moment we will put aside the consideration of the effect upon others — which is so infinitely more important — and think only of the results for the man himself. It is necessary to do this because one of the objections frequently brought against vegetarianism is that it is a beautiful theory, but one the working of which is impracticable, since it is supposed that a man cannot live without devouring dead flesh. That objection is irrational, and is founded upon ignorance or perversion of facts. I am myself an example of its falsity; for I have lived without the pollution of flesh food — without meat, fish or fowl — for the last thirty-eight years, and I not only still survive, but have been during all that time in remarkably good health. Nor am I in any way peculiar in this, for I know some thousands of others who have done the same thing. I know some younger ones who have been so happy as to be unpolluted by the eating of flesh during the whole of their lives; and they are distinctly freer from disease than those who partake of such things.
    Charles Webster Leadbeater
  • I had a sudden longing, like a pain, for the hot smelly East, and remembered that Everett had said something about an Indian restaurant. I asked the barman, a hot-haired Irishman, and he asked one of the business-men (who, I saw now, was a Pakistani) and then was able to tell me that the Calicut Restaurant was on Egg Street, by the Poultry Market. I went there and ate insipid dahl, tough chicken, greasy pappadams, and rice that had congealed to a pudding. The décor was depressing – brown oily wallpaper, a calendar with a Bengali pin-up (buff, deliriously plump, about thirty-eight) – and it was evident that the few Indian students were eating the special curry prepared for the staff. The manager was from Pondicherry : he caled me ‘monsieur’ and was not impressed by my complaints. At least one of the waiters was from Jamaica. I went out angry and, at a pub where the landlady sniffed in curlers, drank brandy till closing-time.
    Anthony Burgess

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