There are two types of words for 9 in the Germanic languages.
Type 1 is g-less:
e.g. German 'neun', Swedish 'nio'.
Type 2 does have a g:
e.g. Dutch 'negen', Frisian 'njoggen'.
You'd think that English 'nine' is type 1, but it used to have a g too: in Old English, it was 'nigon'. It lost its g in Middle English.
So did 'neun' and 'nio' lose their g too?
No, they've never had one.
The g only evolved in the north-western branch of West Germanic.
My new graphic tells you all about it.
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@yvanspijk didnt nine lose the g due to them wanting to sound more roman, during the same time when iland became island?
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@noortjevee No, as the box on the right explains, it was a regular sound change within English, not induced by any other language. Other examples are 'boga' > 'bow', 'lagu' > 'law', 'āgen' > 'own', 'mearg'> 'marrow', 'burg' > '-Bury'.
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@yvanspijk i found the box somewhat confusing, may be becaus it read it early and i am tired as heck :P
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@noortjevee It's a bit technical, so I fully understand. :)
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@yvanspijk oh i can read technical stuff, its just this one confused the heck out of me :P
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text/gemini
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