The difference between Distributive number and Ordinal number

When used as nouns, distributive number means a word that answers "how many times each?" or "how many at a time?", whereas ordinal number means a word that expresses the relative position of an item in a sequence.


check bellow for the other definitions of Distributive number and Ordinal number

  1. Distributive number as a noun (grammar):

    A word that answers "how many times each?" or "how many at a time?"

    Examples:

    "Singly" is a distributive number, while "single" is a multiplier."

  1. Ordinal number as a noun (grammar):

    A word that expresses the relative position of an item in a sequence.

    Examples:

    "First, second and third are the ordinal numbers corresponding to one, two and three."

  2. Ordinal number as a noun (arithmetic):

    A natural number used to denote position in a sequence.

    Examples:

    "In the expression a<sub>3</sub>, the "3" is an ordinal number. "

  3. Ordinal number as a noun (set theory):

    Such a number generalised to correspond to any cardinal number (the size of some set); formally, the order type of some well-ordered set of some cardinality a, which represents an equivalence class of well-ordered sets (exactly those of cardinality a) under the equivalence relation "existence of an order-preserving bijection".