Language
name and locationː
Patani,
North Maluku, Indonesia [Refer to
Ethnologue] |
1. pisɔ |
21. yɔfɔ lu re pisɔ |
2. pilu |
22. |
3. pitel |
23. |
4. pifɔt |
24. |
5. pilim |
25. |
6. pwonom |
26. |
7. pifit |
27. |
8. puwal |
28. |
9. fapolo |
29. |
10. yɔfɔ sɔ |
30. |
11. yɔfɔ sɔ re pisɔ |
40. |
12. |
50. |
13. |
60. |
14. |
70. |
15. |
80. |
16. |
90. |
17. |
100. slibi sɔ |
18. |
200. silibi lu, 201. silibi lu re pisɔ |
19. yɔfɔ sɔ re fapolo |
1000. t͡ʃalan t͡ʃɔ * |
20. yɔfɔ lu |
1000000. maliyoŋ (<miliion ?) |
Linguist providing
data and dateː
Dr. David Kamholz, Department of Linguistics, University
of California at Berkeley, USA. September 3, 2015. |
Other comments: Patani has a decimal system similar to that of Buli. Patani is spoken by about 10,000 speakers in villages on Halmahera island along the west coast, North Maluku province, Indonesia. Note that Patani may be a tonal language but not yet transcribed the tones and the traditional spelling 'c' = IPA [t͡ʃ], ng = IPA [ŋ]. |
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