Woods wrote:Linguaphile wrote:This got me curious so I did a quick count based on Google hits. (...)
I love "monoglot" - I didn't know there was such a word!*
I'm curious, how would we continue into the tens, hundreds and further on? Not only when talking about language, but it could come in handy when working with science.
According to Wikimedia's categories of
Multilingual Signs, there are these:
undecalingual = having eleven languages
dodecalingual = having twelve languages
tredecalingual = having thirteen languages
quattuordecalingual = having fourteen languages
quindecalingual = having fifteen languages
sedecalingual = having sixteen languages
...
duovigintilingual = having twenty-two languages
For a few of these, Wikimedia's listing of categories of Multilingual Signs is the
only place these words are used, so I'm not sure how legit that makes them.
In place of dodecalingual you can also say duodecalingual.
The prefixes are legit though, based on Latin. They are the same prefixes English uses for superlarge numbers, such as
quattuordecillion (10
45) and
duovigintillion (10
69).
Interestingly, Wikimedia's listing of categories for Multilingual Signs comes up with a couple we didn't mention yet: septilingual for seven languages, and novelingual for nine.
So I'll add their Google hits for comparison:
septilingual - 467 Google hits
septalingual - 603 Google hits (today; yesterday it was 608...)
heptalingual - 718 Google hits (today; yesterday: 716)
nonalingual - 386 (yesterday: 394)
nonolingual - 312 (yesterday: 299)
novelingual - 4 Google hits (half of which are from Wikimedia
)
Woods wrote:*I guess biglot, triglot and so on would work as well?
Yes.