five
number /faɪv/
  /faɪv/
Idioms - 5
- There are only five cookies left.
 - five of Sweden’s top financial experts
 - Ten people were invited but only five turned up.
 - Do you have change for five dollars?
 - a five-month contract
 - Look at page five.
 - Five and four is nine.
 - Three fives are fifteen.
 - I can't read your writing—is this meant to be a five?
 - The bulbs are planted in threes or fives (= groups of three or five).
 - We moved to America when I was five (= five years old).
 - Shall we meet at five (= at five o'clock), then?
 
Word OriginOld English fīf, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch vijf and German fünf, from an Indo-European root shared by Latin quinque and Greek pente. 
Idioms 
five a day 
- (especially British English) the amount of fruit or vegetables that some organizations say you should eat in order to be healthy
- Start your five a day with a banana for breakfast.
 
 
give somebody five 
- (informal) to hit the inside of somebody’s hand with your hand as a way of saying hello or to celebrate a victory
- Give me five!
 
 
nine to five 
- the normal working hours in an office
- I work nine to five.
 - a nine-to-five job