Language name and location: Hruso-Levai, India, Tibet, China [Refer to Ethnologue]
|
1. akəʔ |
21. |
2. kəray |
22. |
3. kətayŋ |
23. |
4. purway |
24. |
5. puŋu |
25. |
6. rɛʔ |
26. |
7. mʷoy |
27. |
8. səɡay(k) |
28. |
9. sətəŋ |
29. |
10. rəŋ |
30. kətay rən |
11. akəne |
40. purway rən |
12. k(ə)rayne |
50. puŋu rən |
13. kətay ne |
60. rɛʔ rən |
14. purway ne |
70. mʷoy rən |
15. puŋu ne |
80. səɡay rən |
16. rɛʔ ne |
90. sətəŋ rən |
17. mʷoy ne |
100. rən rən |
18. səɡay ne |
200. |
19. sətəŋ ne |
1000. |
20. kəray rən |
2000. |
Linguist providing data and dateː Dr. Roger Blench, McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, University of Cambridge, Department of History, Cambridge, United Kingdom, August 9, 2018. 提供资料的语言学家: Dr. Roger Blench, 2018 年 8 月 9 日. |
Other comments: Levai /ləʔ˧˩wai˥/ ( Bangru) has a decimal system. Data taken from Roger Blench, "Mijic, the Miji and Bangru Languagesː Distribution, Dialects, Wordlist and Classification", Cambridge, 26 March, 2018. Bangru has a simple tonal system, with two tones, High (H ˊ) and Low (L ˋ) with no glides. As noted above, they may correlate with final glottal stop in final syllable position. Nonetheless, the variation of tone in multi-syllabic words suggests we must recognise tone as a contrastive feature of the language. |
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