Naeso/Math: Difference between revisions

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==base==
==base==
{{V|10|FH=y|RJ=y|JH=y}}
{{V|10|FH=y|RJ=y|JH=y|BF=y}}
{{V|special terms for expressing hexadecimal numbers|RJ=y|JH=y|FH=y}}
{{V|special terms for expressing hexadecimal numbers|RJ=y|JH=y|FH=y|BF=y}}


==How to form number words==
==How to form number words==
*example: 813
*example: 813
{{V|eightonethree|FH=y|RJ=n|JH=y}}
{{V|eightonethree|FH=y|RJ=n|JH=y|BF=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
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**It would still cause issues with large and exact numbers. Namely when there are more numbers than the average person can hold in short-term memory. ~RJ
**It would still cause issues with large and exact numbers. Namely when there are more numbers than the average person can hold in short-term memory. ~RJ


{{V|eighthundred-oneten-three|RJ=y|FH=y|JH=n}}
{{V|eighthundred-oneten-three|RJ=y|FH=y|JH=n|BF=y}}


==number words==
==number words==

Revision as of 14:35, 18 December 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)
    • It would still cause issues with large and exact numbers. Namely when there are more numbers than the average person can hold in short-term memory. ~RJ
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)

{{V|pu|JH=y}|FH=y|BF=y}

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 (who?)
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

djulnen — 0/0 (0/0)

hundred thousand

founh — 0/0 (0/0)

million

tinem — 0/0 (0/0)
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.