Foħθīrix morphology

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Main article: Foħθīrix

This page gives an extensive description of Foħθīrix morphological features.

Numerals

The numeral system relies on a decimal base.

The first ten cardinal numbers are forms on their own:

digit
full form
1:
ɕere
2:
moše
3:
bīne
4:
šāre
5:
ħœfe
6:
kage
7:
ňuħe
8:
tūhe
9:
pēte
10:
lūme

Numerals from 11 to 19 are built with the construction NUM + ňe + lūme:

digit
full form
11:
ɕereňelūme
12:
mošeňelūme
13:
bīneňelūme
14:
šāreňelūme
15:
ħœfeňelūme
16:
kageňelūme
17:
ňuħeňelūme
18:
tūheňelūme
19:
pēteňelūme

The numerals for (one) hundred and (one) thousand are forms on their own:

digit
full form
100:
ħūxe
1000:
xāħe

These numerals are treated as adjective-like forms: They precede a noun cluster and decline according to their adjoining nouns in case, but they do not agree in number. Numerals do decline only in singular number and their nominative form is identical to the accusative form.

ɕere ǧenex
one man
ħœfešu sārēšu
to the five women

The numerals for tens, hundreds and thousands are the plural forms of the numerals for ten, (one) hundred and (one) thousand:

tens:
lūmē
hundreds:
ħūxē
thousands:
xāħē

The numerals for the multiples of tens, hundreds and thousands are built with the construction NUM (without the final -e) + lūmē / ħūxē / xāħē, with some irregularities:

tens
hundreds
thousands
2x:
mošlūmē mošħūxē mošxāħē
3x:
bīnlūmē bīnħūxē bīnxāħē
4x:
šārlūmē šārħūxē šārxāħē
5x:
ħœflūmē ħœfħūxē ħœfxāħē
6x:
kaglūmē kaħūxē kaxāħē
7x:
ňuħlūmē ňuħūxē ňuxāħē
8x:
tūhlūmē tūħūxē tūxāħē
9x:
pētlūmē pēħūxē pēxāħē

All cardinal numerals above the form for 19 are meant as invariable, except for the numeral for 100 and the numeral for 1000.

Composite numbers are built by just putting them beside, without any conjunction, in descending order:

  • 1985: xāħe pētħūxē tūhlūmē ħœfe

When a composite numeral has a declined adjoining number, only its declinable numeral forms do decline in agreement.

Numbers above the multiples of thousands have no name and are specified by the lesser numerals.

Ordinal numerals are formed by replacing last vowel of the cardinal numeral form, -e or -ē, with the the adjectival ending -iri-:

ɕere → ɕeririx
one → first
tūhlūmē → tūhlūmirix
eighty → eightieth

The first ten ordinal numerals, with some examples of additional numerals, are:

digit
adjective form
1st:
ɕeririx
2nd:
moširix
3rd:
bīnirix
4th:
šāririx
5th:
ħœfirix
6th:
kagirix
7th:
ňuħirix
8th:
tūhirix
9th:
pētirix
10th:
lūmirix
11th:
ɕereňelūmirix
12th:
mošeňelūmirix
20th:
mošlūmirix
30th:
bīnlūmirix
600th:
kaħūxirix
9000th:
pēxāħirix

If the numeral form is composite, the comparative ending is added to every form, and they agree with their adjoining noun in case and number:

  • 378th: bīnħūxirix ňuħlūmirix tūhirix