thrittene

Etymology
From Anglian (compare West Saxon ), from ; equivalent to.

Numeral

 * 1) thirteen
 * 2) * 1387–1400,, , in , [Westminster: , published 1478], ; , editor, The Complete Works of Geoffrey Chaucer, Vol. 4, Second Edition, Oxford at the Clarendon Press: Humphrey Milford, 1900, , lines 2253–2261 (547–553)
 * "enm"

- 'My lord,' quod he, 'whan that the weder is fair, With-outen wind or perturbinge of air, Lat bringe a cartwheel here in-to this halle, But loke that it have his spokes alle. Twelf spokes hath a cartwheel comunly. And bring me than twelf freres, woot ye why? For thrittene is a covent, as I gesse.[']