I.six: “sex minae,” Plaut. Capt. 5, 2, 21: “dies,” id. Cist. 2, 1, 13: “menses,” Ter. Eun. 2, 2, 46; id. Ad. 3, 3, 42: “sex aut septem loca,” Lucr. 4, 577: “suffragia,” Cic. Rep. 2, 22, 39: “sex et nonaginta,” id. ib.: “sex et quinquaginta milia passuum,” id. Rosc. Am. 7, 19: “decem et sex milia peditum armati,” Liv. 37, 40: “inter Bis sex famulas (= duodecim),” Ov. M. 4, 220; Verg. A. 9, 272: “sex septem,” six or seven, Ter. Eun. 2, 3, 41; Hor. Ep. 1, 1, 58; v. septem, sex primi, sexprimi.
sex (also written VI., and in inscrr. SEXS; cf. Inscr. Orell. 3745), num. adj. cf. Sanscr. shash, Gr. ἕξ, Goth. saihs, Germ. sechs, Engl. six,