six

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six [number]

The number 6

US /sɪks/ 
UK /sɪks/ 
Example: 

Look for a bus with a number six on the front of it.

Oxford Essential Dictionary

six

 number (plural sixes)
6

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English

six

six /sɪks/ BrE AmE number
[Language: Old English]
1. the number 6:
six months ago
She arrived just after six (=six o'clock).
He learnt to play the violin when he was six (=six years old).
2. six figures/digits used to talk about a number that is between 100,000 and 1,000,000:
The final cost of the project will easily run into six figures (=be over £100,000 or $100,000).
3. at sixes and sevens informal disorganized and confused:
When the visitors arrived, we were still at sixes and sevens.
4. it’s six of one and half a dozen of the other spoken used to say that both people or groups who are involved in a situation are equally responsible for something bad that happens:
In any family quarrel, it’s usually six of one and half a dozen of the other.
5. knock/hit somebody for six British English spoken to affect someone strongly in a bad way:
Losing his job really knocked him for six.
6. [countable] a hit in ↑cricket that scores six ↑runs because the ball crosses the edge of the playing area before touching the ground

Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

six

six [six sixes]   [sɪks]    [sɪks]  number
6  There are examples of how to use numbers at the entry for five.
Idioms: at sixes and sevens  hit somebody for six  it's six of one and half a dozen of the other  six feet under  
Word Origin:

Old English siex, six, syx, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch zes and German sechs, from an Indo-European root shared by Latin sex and Greek hex.

Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary

Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary - 4th Edition
 

six / sɪks / number

A1 the number 6:

Look for a bus with a number six on the front of it.

"How many grandchildren do you have now?" "I've got six."

Collins Advanced Learner’s English Dictionary

six

[sɪ̱ks]
 
 sixes

 1) NUM Six is the number 6.
  ...a glorious career spanning more than six decades.
 2) N-COUNT: usu sing In cricket, if a player hits a six, they score six runs by hitting the ball so that it crosses the boundary at the edge of the playing area before it touches the ground.
 3) PHRASE: V inflects If someone or something is hit for six or knocked for six, they are very upset or badly affected by an experience or piece of news. [BRIT, INFORMAL]
  The loss of my wife hit me for six; it took me months to recover...
  Many areas in the North were knocked for six by that first recession.
 4) PHRASE: usu v-link PHR If you say that someone or something is at sixes and sevens, you mean that they are confused or disorganized. [INFORMAL]
  The government is at sixes and sevens over the issue of domestic security.

Merriam-Webster's Advanced Learner's Dictionary

six

six /ˈsɪks/ noun, pl sixes
1 [count] : the number 6
2 [count] : the sixth in a set or series
• the six of hearts
3 [noncount] : six o'clock
• “What time is it?” “It's six.”
• I leave each day at six.
at sixes and sevens chiefly Brit informal : disorganized and confused
• The change left everyone at sixes and sevens.
• Everything will be at sixes and sevens until our computer system is fixed.
hit/knock (someone) for six Brit informal : to have an unpleasant and shocking effect on (someone)
• The news of the accident really hit me for six.
six of one, half (a) dozen of the other US or chiefly Brit six of one and half a dozen of the other informal
- used to say that you do not see any real difference between two possible choices
• “Which do you prefer?” “I don't care; it's six of one, half a dozen of the other.”
- six adj
six possibilities/hours
- six pronoun
Six (of them) will be coming tonight.