11
3
In my native language, and most Indian languages that I know, there is a way to ask for "whichth", but I don't seem to have found anything similar in English. Let me explain below.
What question would you need to ask to obtain the following answers?
- In terms of geographical area, Australia is the sixth largest country.
- John is his father's third son.
- Mars is the fourth planet in the solar system.
The only way I can think of is use of roundabout legalese-like sentence structure, which makes it sound laughable. For example:
- If countries are arranged in order of their geographical area, then at what number is Australia?
- Among the sons of John's father, if you arrange them in the order of birth, then at what number does John appear?
- At what position is Mars in the solar system, in terms of distance from the Sun?
If there is such a word as "whichth", one could ask, for example:
- Australia is "whichth" largest country in terms of geographical area?
We have that word in my first language too. In a site for native English speakers who want to learn Thai, there is this dialog: My parents have five children. Which are you? ;^) – Damkerng T. – 2014-01-04T18:09:19.403
4Whicheth! This sounds like an awesome and useful word. I vote we unilaterally adopt it in English. If selfie twerk, phablet, and apols (short for apologies (had to look it up)) can make it into Oxford's, then useful words like whicheth should stand proudly in their company. – Scotty – 2014-01-04T19:07:30.107