Language name and locationː Lushootseed, Washington, USA [Refer to Ethnologue]

言名称和分布地区卢苏泽德语, 美国西北部华盛顿州普吉特海湾地区

 

1. dəčʼúʔ

21.  sáliʔačiʔ ʔi kʷi dčúʔ

2. sáliʔ

22.  sáliʔačiʔ ʔi kʷi sáliʔ

3. ɬíxʷ

23.  sáliʔačiʔ ʔi kʷi ɬíxʷ

4. búus

24.  sáliʔačiʔ ʔi kʷi búus

5. cəlác

25.  sáliʔačiʔ ʔi kʷi cəlác

6. yəláʔ (Northern)/ dᶻəláčiʔ (Southern)

26.  sáliʔačiʔ ʔi kʷi yəláʔ

7. cʼúʔkʷs

27.  sáliʔačiʔ ʔi kʷi cʼúʔkʷs

8. təqáčiʔ

28.  sáliʔačiʔ ʔi kʷi təqáčiʔ

9. x̩ʷə́l / x̌ʷə́l

29.  sáliʔačiʔ ʔi kʷi  x̌ʷə́l

10. ʔúlub (Northern) / pádəs (S.)

30.  (s)ɬíxʷačiʔ

11. ʔúlub ʔikʷi dčʼú?

40.  sbúusàčiʔ

12. ʔúlub ʔi kʷi sáliʔ

50.  (s)cəlácačiʔ

13. ʔúlub ʔi kʷi ɬíxʷ

60.  yəlaʔcačiʔ ( N.) / dᶻəlačiʔači? (S.)

14. ʔúlub ʔi kʷi búus

70.  cʼukʷsačiʔ

15. ʔúlub ʔi kʷi cəlác

80.  tqáčiʔačiʔ / təqáčiʔačiʔ

16. ʔúlub ʔi kʷi yəláʔ

90.  x̌ʷəlačiʔ

17. ʔúlub ʔi kʷi cʼúʔkʷs

100. dəčʼúʔ sbəkʼʷàčiʔ

18. ʔúlub ʔi kʷi təqáčiʔ

200. sáliʔ sbəkʼʷàčiʔ

19. ʔúlub ʔi kʷi  x̌ʷə́l

1000. ʔúlub sbəkʼʷàčiʔ (Northern dialect)

20. sáliʔačiʔ

2000. sáliʔačiʔ sbəkʼʷàčiʔ  ( 20 x 100 )

 

Linguist providing data and dateː Prof. M. Dale Kinkade, Department of Linguistics, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada, March 12, 1990.

Prof. David Beck, Department of Linguistics, University of Alberta, Canada, October 17, 2007.

提供资的语言: Prof. M. Dale Kinkade, 1990 年 3 月 12 日. Prof. David Beck, 2007 年 10 月 17 日.

 

Other comments: Lushootseed (dxʷləšucid) or Dəxʷləšucid, Northern Lushootseed, Northern Puget Sound Salish is recently extinct language. The last native speaker, Vi Hilbert, died in 2008 (2008 C. Willmsen) in 18,000 ethnic population formerly spoken in Puget Sound area, Washington state, United States. Lushootseed has a decimal system. Lushootseed has two series of words used for counting. The first set of these are the general numerals used for non-humans. The lexical suffix -ačiʔ 'hand' is used to indicate decades, that is, the interval corresponding to the number of fingers on both hands, while the word for 100, sbəkʼʷàčiʔ, appears to contain the radical bəkʼʷ 'all', suggesting an etymological source in an expression meaning 'all hands'.


Back >> [ Home ] >> [ Eskimo-Aleut ] >> [ Eyak-Athabaskan] >>
[
Algic ] >> [ Salishan ] >> [ Siouan ] >> [ Iroquoian ]
>>
 
[ Yuman ] >> [ Other North and Central American languages ]