twain

twain — number

1. An old-fashioned or poetic word meaning two — used before a plural noun to say t

1.數詞
釋義

An old-fashioned or poetic word meaning two — used before a plural noun to say that there are two of something.

例句

There were twain knights who guarded the castle gate, as the old tale goes.

archaic register: used before a plural noun (twain knights)

The ancient manuscript spoke of twain rivers flowing from the same mountain.

同義詞
  • two

    the standard modern word; use in all everyday contexts

  • a couple of

    informal; interchangeable with 'two' but slightly less precise

文法句型

twain + plural noun

用法筆記

This use of twain as a determiner (directly before a noun) is extremely rare in modern English. Learners are far more likely to encounter twain as a noun in the fixed phrase 'in twain' or the saying 'never the twain shall meet.'

常見錯誤

I saw twain birds in the garden.
I saw two birds in the garden.
💡'twain' is not used in everyday modern English; use 'two' instead.
She has twain sisters.
She has two sisters.
💡In ordinary conversation, always use 'two.' Reserve 'twain' for deliberately old-fashioned or poetic contexts.

twain — noun