1 - een
2 - twee
3 - drie
4 - vier
5 - vijf
In Dutch, the numbers from 1 to 100 are spelled as follows: 1 is "één," 2 is "twee," 3 is "drie," 4 is "vier," 5 is "vijf," 6 is "zes," 7 is "zeven," 8 is "acht," 9 is "negen," and 10 is "tien." The pattern continues with "elf" for 11, "twaalf" for 12, and follows a similar structure for tens (like "twintig" for 20, "dertig" for 30, etc.) up to 100, which is "honderd." For numbers in between, combinations are used, such as "eenentwintig" for 21.
1. Genesis 2. Exodus 3. Leviticus 4. Numbers 5. Deuteronomy
1.) one dutch contribution is that we have trade and so do they.
today
The prime numbers from 1 - 5 are 2, 3, and 5.
1 and 5 are the only numbers.
3+1+1=5 5 toothpicks
spell out the numbers 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, and 10 in English then alphabetize them.
b=2 e=5 d=4; 254 If it was actually "A bed" than just add a 1
1, -5, 5, -1
The GCF is 1.
The numbers are -1, 0, 1, 2 and 3.