ABC of Czech Czech by Numbers - Six

06-05-2006 | Pavla Horáková

Welcome to Czech by Numbers, Radio Prague's own Czech language series which explores Czech numbers and also their use in idioms. Today we'll be looking at the number six - šest. The common Indo-European origin of the Czech and English word is just about noticeable in the sound.

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Instead of šest our ancestors sometimes used to say půl tuctu - half a dozen - but you will rarely hear that said these days.

The figure of six - šestka - can mean a molar tooth or room or bus number 6. If you say about somebody that he or she má nohu šestku it means they wear size 6 shoes. You need to be careful there because if you use the plural má šestky you would be referring to the size of a completely different item of clothing.

The ordinal number, sixth, is šestý. You will often hear that someone has šestý smysl, a sixth sense for something. šestice is a group of six. šesticípá hvězda is a six-pointed star.

A colloquial expression o sto šest, literally "for a hundred and six" can be translated as "with a vengeance". A typical use of the idiom would be pracuje o sto šest, he works very hard.

Another Czech word derived from the number six is šesterák - a stag with six tines, a six-pointer. Whereas šesták was originally a six-kreutzer coin. Today the word is used to describe a small coin or a small amount of money. Pracovat za pár šestáků means to work for peanuts.

And this is the end of lesson number six - šestá lekce. Next week we'll be back with the lucky number seven. Till then na shledanou - good-bye.

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