δεκαπέντε

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πενία μόνα τὰς τέχνας ἐγείρει → poverty alone promotes skilled work, necessity is the mother of invention, necessity is the mother of all invention, poverty is the mother of invention, out of necessity comes invention, out of necessity came invention, frugality is the mother of invention

Source

Greek (Liddell-Scott)

δεκαπέντε: οἱ, αἱ, τά, ἴδε ἐν λ. δέκα.

Spanish (DGE)

• Alolema(s): -πένδε Epigr.Anat.11.1988.101.65 (Perga I a.C.), tes. -πέμπε IG 9(2).553.12 (Larisa I a.C.); frec. escrito δέκα πέντε
quince X.An.7.8.26, Arist.HA 632b21, Hp.Int.13, IIasos 2.16 (IV/III a.C.), IG 7.3055.14 (IV a.C.), Plb.3.56.3, PCair.Zen.176.196 (III a.C.), Asoka Edict.13S., PRev.Laws 12.17 (III a.C.), IG l.c., Eu.Io.11.18, Ep.Gal.1.18, IUrb.Rom.895.6, I.BI 2.519, D.Chr.32.87, Plu.2.837f, Philostr.VA 4.45, POxy.3514.19 (III d.C.), PCol.141.31 (IV d.C.), PMich.611.11 (V d.C.), OAshm.Shelton 149 (biz.)
οἱ δ. ἄνδρες como trad. de lat. quindecimuiri sacris faciendis, Mon.Anc.Gr.12.9, IUrb.Rom.126.2 (II d.C.), οἱ δ. ἄνδρες οἱ ἱεροποιοί Mon.Anc.Gr.4.5, cf. δέκα.

English (Strong)

from δέκα and πέντε; ten and five, i.e. fifteen: fifteen.

English (Thayer)

for the earlier πεντεκαίδεκα, fifteen: Ald., Complutensian; Polybius 3,56, 3var.; Diodorus 2,13; Plutarch, Dion 38,1; others; cf. δεκαδύο).

Greek Monolingual

(AM δεκαπέντε)
ποσό που αποτελείται από μια δεκάδα και πέντε μονάδες.