Naeso/Math: Difference between revisions

From FrathWiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
No edit summary
(voted, added new words)
Line 1: Line 1:
==base==
==base==
{{V|10|FH=y|RJ=y}}
{{V|10|FH=y|RJ=y|JH=y}}


{{V|special terms for expressing hexadecimal numbers|RJ=y}}
{{V|special terms for expressing hexadecimal numbers|RJ=y|JH=y}}


==How to form number words==
==How to form number words==
*example: 813
*example: 813
{{V|eightonethree|FH=y|RJ=n}}
{{V|eightonethree|FH=y|RJ=n|JH=y}}
* I will only propose number words with one syllable, making the above a lot easier to understand. —[[User:Fenhl|Fenhl]] 05:04, 26 October 2010 (PDT)
* I will only propose number words with one syllable, making the above a lot easier to understand. —[[User:Fenhl|Fenhl]] 05:04, 26 October 2010 (PDT)
** I disagree since short words are easier to misunderstand. ~RJ
** I disagree since short words are easier to misunderstand. ~RJ
{{V|eighthundred-oneten-three|RJ=y|FH=y}}
**Hopefully my proposal avoids this problem.  I generated a set of phonologically-redundant words using  [http://jimhenry.conlang.org/conlang/redundancy.htm this algorithm], tweaking the input file so its output overlapped as much as possible with Fenhl and MalfermitaKodo's proposals. --[[User:Jim Henry|Jim Henry]] 15:52, 26 October 2010 (PDT)
 
{{V|eighthundred-oneten-three|RJ=y|FH=y|JH=n}}


==number words==
==number words==
Line 15: Line 17:
===0===
===0===


{{V|se|FH=y|RJ=y}}
{{V|se|FH=y|RJ=y|JH=y}}


===1===
===1===


{{V|a|FH=y|RJ=n}}
{{V|a|FH=y|RJ=n|JH=n}}


* Redundancy is a feature, not a bug. ~RJ
* Redundancy is a feature, not a bug. ~RJ


{{V|tsai|RJ=y|FH=y}}
{{V|tsai|RJ=y|FH=y|JH=n}}
{{V|tho|JH=y}}


===2===
===2===


{{V|dy|FH=y}}
{{V|dy|FH=y|JH=y}}


===3===
===3===


{{V|fe|FH=y|RJ=n}}
{{V|fe|FH=y|RJ=n|JH=n}}


* Has anyone considered that this might be used to speak phone numbers over a staticyVoIP connection‽ ~RJ
* Has anyone considered that this might be used to speak phone numbers over a staticyVoIP connection‽ ~RJ


{{V|efe|RJ=y|FH=y}}
{{V|efe|RJ=y|FH=y|JH=n}}
{{V|pu|JH=y}}


===4===
===4===


{{V|gi|FH=y|RJ=y}}
{{V|gi|FH=y|RJ=y|JH=y}}


===5===
===5===


{{V|ba|FH=y|RJ=y}}
{{V|ba|FH=y|RJ=y|JH=y}}


===6===
===6===


{{V|vo|FH=y|RJ=y}}
{{V|vo|FH=y|RJ=y|JH=n}}
{{V|vae|JH=y}}


===7===
===7===


{{V|zu|FH=y|RJ=y}}
{{V|zu|FH=y|RJ=y|JH=n}}
{{V|zui|JH=y}}


===8===
===8===
Line 59: Line 65:
* Too similar to 6 ~RJ
* Too similar to 6 ~RJ
{{V|lui|RJ=y|FH=y}}
{{V|lui|RJ=y|FH=y}}
{{V|toa|JH=y}}


===9===
===9===


{{V|na|FH=y|RJ=n}}
{{V|na|FH=y|RJ=n|JH=n}}


* Too similar to ba
* Too similar to ba


{{V|dzia|RJ=y|FH=y}}  
{{V|dzia|RJ=y|FH=y|JH=n}}
{{V|fel|JH=y}}


===ten===
===ten===


{{V|tthi|FH=y}}
{{V|tthi|FH=y|JH=n}}
{{V|zym|JH=y}}
 
===eleven===
{{V|thoanh|JH=y}}
 
===twelve===
{{V|munh|JH=y}}
 
===thirteen===
{{V|munh|JH=y}}
 
===fourteen===
{{V|doal|JH=y}}
 
===fifteen===
{{V|bem|JH=y}}
 
===sixteen===
{{V|dzim|JH=y}}


===hundred===
===hundred===


{{V|on|FH=y}}
{{V|on|FH=y|JH=y}}


===thousand===
===thousand===


{{V|jol|FH=y}}
{{V|jol|FH=y|JH=y}}


===ten thousand===
===ten thousand===

Revision as of 14:52, 26 October 2010

base

10 — 0/0 (0/0)
special terms for expressing hexadecimal numbers — 0/0 (0/0)

How to form number words

  • example: 813
eightonethree — 0/0 (0/0)
  • I will only propose number words with one syllable, making the above a lot easier to understand. —Fenhl 05:04, 26 October 2010 (PDT)
    • I disagree since short words are easier to misunderstand. ~RJ
    • Hopefully my proposal avoids this problem. I generated a set of phonologically-redundant words using this algorithm, tweaking the input file so its output overlapped as much as possible with Fenhl and MalfermitaKodo's proposals. --Jim Henry 15:52, 26 October 2010 (PDT)
eighthundred-oneten-three — 0/0 (0/0)

number words

0

se — 0/0 (0/0)

1

a — 0/0 (0/0)
  • Redundancy is a feature, not a bug. ~RJ
tsai — 0/0 (0/0)
tho — 0/0 (0/0)

2

dy — 0/0 (0/0)

3

fe — 0/0 (0/0)
  • Has anyone considered that this might be used to speak phone numbers over a staticyVoIP connection‽ ~RJ
efe — 0/0 (0/0)
pu — 0/0 (0/0)

4

gi — 0/0 (0/0)

5

ba — 0/0 (0/0)

6

vo — 0/0 (0/0)
vae — 0/0 (0/0)

7

zu — 0/0 (0/0)
zui — 0/0 (0/0)

8

to — 0/0 (0/0)
  • Too similar to 6 ~RJ
lui — 0/0 (0/0)
toa — 0/0 (0/0)

9

na — 0/0 (0/0)
  • Too similar to ba
dzia — 0/0 (0/0)
fel — 0/0 (0/0)

ten

tthi — 0/0 (0/0)
zym — 0/0 (0/0)

eleven

thoanh — 0/0 (0/0)

twelve

munh — 0/0 (0/0)

thirteen

munh — 0/0 (0/0)

fourteen

doal — 0/0 (0/0)

fifteen

bem — 0/0 (0/0)

sixteen

dzim — 0/0 (0/0)

hundred

on — 0/0 (0/0)

thousand

jol — 0/0 (0/0)

ten thousand

hundred thousand

million

Naeso
General:VotingMember listAn Introduction to Naeso
Phonology and orthography:PhonologyStressOrthographyTransliteration
Grammar:GrammarSuffixesPrepositions
Lexicon and corpus:Naeso-EnglishEnglish-NaesoProposed wordsSwadeshNamesCorpus of SentencesMath
Conlang relay torches:LCC4 Relay
This page is part of the project Naeso. We meet up to discuss changes in 'real time' in #naeso on Freenode.