Language
name and location:
Eastern Punjabi,
Punjab, India
[Refer to
Ethnologue] |
1. ɪkk |
21. ɪkki |
2. do |
22. bai |
3. tɪnn |
23. te'i |
4. car |
24. cə'vi |
5. pə̃nɟ |
25. pəñɟi |
6. cʰe |
26. cʰəbbi |
7. sətt |
27. sətai |
8. əʈʰ |
28. ʈʰai |
9. no |
29. nətti ( 30 - 1) |
10. dəs |
30. təri |
11. yarã |
40. cali |
12. barã |
50. pə̃nɟa |
13. terã |
60. səʈʰ |
14. chɔdã |
70. sə'tər |
15. pəndrã |
80. əssi |
16. solã |
90. nəbbe |
17. sətarã |
100. sɔ |
18. ʈʰarã |
200. do sɔ |
19. ʊnni ( 20 - 1) |
1000. həɟar |
20. vi |
2000. do həɟar |
Linguist providing data and dateː Prof. Joga Singh, Professor & Former Head, Department of Linguistics & Punjabi Lexicography, Former Director, Centre for Diaspora Studies, Punjabi University, Patiala - 147 002 (Punjab) - INDIA. July 7, 2017.
|
Other comments: Eastern Punjabi has a numeral system similar to that of Hindi. Special Notes: 1. Symbols used (in the font they are used): ɔ, ɖ, ə, ɛ, ɪ, ɳ, ɽ, ʈ, ˊ, ˋ, ɟ, ʊ, and 2. Disregard Spaces: Kindly disregard spaces after ɟ and ʊ symbols. I copied these from some source but wherever these are pasted they create a blank space after them, which I am unable to delete without deleting the respective symbol. 3. Colloquial forms: The pronunciation given here is colloquial which untrained Punjabi will use. The variety used is the standard dialect, that is Majhi, with Lahore (in Pakistan) and Amritsar (in India) as central places. |
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