Being one more than one hundred.
The cardinal number occurring after hundred and before hundred and two, represented in Roman numerals as CI and in Arabic numerals as 101.
Sinônimos
Examples for "ci"
Examples for "ci"
1As to the tomb of the Julian family, see AUGUSTUS, c. ci.
2The wine served by Tang Wan in Lu You's ci poem.
3Grant, who began the war smoking his meerschaum pipe, switched full-time to ci gars.
4The First Variations were those on La ci darem, Op.
5Encore vingt ou trente ans de cette vie-ci, et puis nous songerons a nous.
1Whereupon she extracted from her bosom one hundred one-dollat bills.
2Results: One hundred one patients were enrolled; 97 began treatment.
3Results: One hundred one subjects had a follow-up bronchoscopy.
4Results: One hundred one patients underwent MR examinations.
5Results: One hundred one patients were evaluable for response in group A and 99 in group B.
1In favor of accepting the donation, three hundred and one; opposed, fifty-eight.
2The young bridegroom abode in the palace one hundred and one weeks.
3This was in the year of our Lord eleven hundred and one.
4And a hundred and one things can happen in half an hour.
5Sixty guns meant a princess, one hundred and one meant a prince.
6He lived about a hundred years, some say a hundred and one.
7There's a hundred and one things to be done out of hand.
8Results: Two hundred and one patients were enrolled in this study.
9One hundred and one patients received stomas during their first operation.
10There are a hundred and one ways this could go wrong.
11Findings: One hundred and one participants entered laboratory studies and 69 completed them.
12One thousand two hundred and one subjects were entered into the final analysis.
13He will receive a hundred and one blows of the knout.
14In a hundred and one thousand centuries... unity again, and wisdom.
15It was presumed lost with a hundred and one passengers and three crew.
16At last we pulled up before the tenement at five hundred and one.