Language name and location: Mombo Dogon, Mopti, Mali [Refer to: Ethnologue]

言名称和分布地区蒙博-多贡语, 马里中部邦莫普提区邦贾加拉镇

 

1. yɛ̀ːtáːŋɡù / tíːtà (in counting)

21.  pɛ́ːnɛ́ːŋɡá yɛ̀ː táːŋɡá súɡɔ́

2. nɛ́ːŋɡá

22.  pɛ́ːnɛ́ːŋɡá nɛ́ːŋɡá súɡɔ́ 

3. táːndì

23.  pɛ́ːnɛ́ːŋɡá táːndì súɡɔ́

4. kɛ́ːjɔ́

24.  pɛ́ːnɛ́ːŋɡá kɛ́ːjɔ́ súɡɔ́

5. núːmù

25.  pɛ́ːnɛ́ːŋɡá núːmù súɡɔ́

6. kúléyⁿ

26.  pɛ́ːnɛ́ːŋɡá kúléyⁿ súɡɔ́

7. sɔ́ːlì

27.  pɛ́ːnɛ́ːŋɡá sɔ́ːlì súɡɔ́

8. séːlè

28.  pɛ́ːnɛ́ːŋɡá séːlè súɡɔ́

9. tóːwà

29.  pɛ́ːnɛ́ːŋɡá tóːwà súɡɔ́

10. pɛ́ːlù

30.  pɛ́ːtáːndì

11. pɛ́ːlú yɛ̀ː táːŋɡá súɡɔ́

40.  dɛ̂ː

12. pɛ́ːlú nɛ́ːŋɡá súɡɔ́ 

50.  dɛ̀ː ndò pèːlú

13. pɛ́ːlú táːndì súɡɔ́

60.  pɛ́ːlú kúléyⁿ

14. pɛ́ːlú kɛ́ːjɔ́ súɡɔ́ 

70.  síŋɡì pɛ́ːlú ólyâː (80-10 ?)

15. pɛ́ːlú núːmù súɡɔ́

80.  síŋɡì

16. pɛ́ːlú kúléyⁿ súɡɔ́ 

90.  síŋɡì ndò pɛ́ːlú (80+10)

17. pɛ́ːlú sɔ́ːlì súɡɔ́

100. síŋɡì ndò pɛ̀ː-nɛ́ːŋɡá (80+20) *

18. pɛ́ːlú séːlè súɡɔ́ 

200. tɛ́mdɛ́rɛ́ nɛ́ŋɡá

19. pɛ́rɛ́ tóːwà súɡɔ́

1000. múnjù, sìlá múnju

20. pɛ́ːnɛ́ːŋɡá

2000. múnjù nɛ́ːŋɡà

 

Linguist providing data and dateː Dr. Kirill Prokhorov, Humboldt University of Berlin, Germany and Museum of Anthropology and Ethnography of RAS, St. Petersburg, Russia. August 1, 2011.

供资料的语言学家: Dr. Kirill Prokhorov, 2011 年 8 月 1 日.

 

Other comments: Mombo Dogon has an archaic numeral system base on 80. They borrowed Fulfulde number 100 'tɛ́mdɛ́rɛ́'. Mombo (aka Kolu So) is spoken by approximately 19,000 speakers in in several villages including Songho that are on or near the highway from Mopti-Sevare to Bandiagara. The Nyambeenge and Ambaleenge varieties reported on Blench's website as potentially distinct languages may turn out to be dialects of Mombo from a linguist's perspective, though not necessarily from that of the local people.

There are several important things about Mombo numeral system as belowː

 

1) Terms for 160, 240, 320, 400, 480 and 540 are formed by combination of sí, which is shortened síŋgì ‘80’, and a single digit numeral from 2 to 7. Thus sí nɛ́:ŋgá is ‘160’, sí tá:ndì is 240, etc.

 

2) múnjù also means ‘800’

 

3) In forties and eighties, a low-toned decimal term is followed by instrumental-comitative ndó and a single-digit (xxx).

(xxx)   dɛ̀: ǹdó sé:lè     ‘48’

(xxx)   sìŋgì ǹdó kɛ́:jɔ́  ‘84’ 

In the other tens the multiple is followed by a single-digit term, which in its turn is followed by word súgɔ́, functioning like a linking element, but not found elsewhere outside the numerals (as in twenties).


 

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