Language name and locationː Lushootseed, Washington, USA [Refer to Ethnologue]
|
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 Prof. David Beck, Department of Linguistics, University of Alberta, Canada, October 17, 2007. 提供资料的语言学家: 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'. |
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