Language name and locationː Luiseño, California state, USA [Refer to Ethnologue]

言名称和分布地区卢伊塞诺语美国加州南部卢伊塞诺人保留地

 

1. suˈpul

21.   

2. weh

22.   

3. ˈpaːhay

23.   

4. waˈsaʔ

24.   

5. maˈhaːr

25.   

6. paˈvaːhay (litː 'again one')

26.   

7. 

27.   

8. 

28.   

9. 

29.   

10. 

30.   

11. 

40.   

12. 

50.   

13. 

60.   

14. 

70.   

15. 

80.   

16. 

90.   

17. 

100.

18. 

200.  

19. 

1000.  

20. 

2000. 

 

Linguists providing data and dateː Prof. William Bright, Department of Linguistics, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado, USA, April 29, 1993.

提供资的语言: Prof. William Bright, 1993 年 4 月 29 日

 

Other comments: Luiseño (Cham’teela) or Payómkawichum is an extinct language,

the last known speaker survived into the early 2010s within 2,500 ethnic population in several Luiseño Mission Indians Reservations, south California, United States. Luiseño has only six numbers recorded. Now the Luiseño speakers use only Spanish or English numerals above 5. However, in 1905 John Sparkman reported a complex native system up to 200.


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