Naeso/Math
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base
10 — 4/0 (FH,RJ,JH,BF,/0)
special terms for expressing hexadecimal numbers — 4/0 (RJ,JH,FH,BF,/0)
How to form number words
- example: 813
eightonethree — 3/1 (FH,JH,BF,/RJ,)
- 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 — 2/2 (RJ,BF,/FH,JH,)
How to mark hex numbers
- I certainly do not want Naeso speakers to have to guess on whether a number is dec or hex. How do we avoid this? —Fenhl 04:43, 18 April 2011 (PDT)
number words
0
se — 4/0 (FH,RJ,JH,BF,/0)
1
a — 2/2 (FH,BF,/RJ,JH,)
- Redundancy is a feature, not a bug. ~RJ
tsai — 2/2 (RJ,FH,/JH,BF,)
tho — 3/0 (JH,FH,BF,/0)
2
dy — 3/0 (FH,JH,BF,/0)
3
fe — 2/2 (FH,BF,/RJ,JH,)
- Has anyone considered that this might be used to speak phone numbers over a staticyVoIP connection‽ ~RJ
efe — 2/2 (RJ,FH,/JH,BF,)
pu — 3/0 (JH,FH,BF,/0)
4
gi — 4/0 (FH,RJ,JH,BF,/0)
5
ba — 4/0 (FH,RJ,JH,BF,/0)
6
vo — 3/1 (FH,RJ,BF,/JH,)
vae — 2/1 (JH,FH,/BF,)
7
zu — 3/1 (FH,RJ,BF,/JH,)
zui — 2/1 (JH,FH,/BF,)
8
to — 2/2 (FH,BF,/RJ,JH,)
- Too similar to 6 ~RJ
lui — 2/2 (RJ,FH,/BF,JH,)
toa — 2/1 (JH,FH,/BF,)
9
na — 2/2 (FH,BF,/RJ,JH,)
- Too similar to ba —RJ
dzia — 2/2 (RJ,FH,/JH,BF,)
fel — 2/1 (JH,FH,/BF,)
ten
tthi — 1/2 (FH,/JH,BF,)
zym — 3/0 (JH,FH,BF,/0)
eleven
thoanh — 2/1 (JH,FH,/BF,)
zym a — 2/0 (BF,JH,/0)
- I think this is in regard to hex numbers, so zym a would be inappropriate here. —Fenhl 04:43, 18 April 2011 (PDT)
twelve
munh — 2/0 (JH,FH,/0)
zym dy — 2/0 (BF,JH,/0)
thirteen
munh — 1/2 (JH,/FH,BF,)
- Same as twelve —Fenhl 16:42, 10 April 2011 (PDT)
zym pu — 2/0 (BF,JH,/0)
syul — 2/1 (FH,JH,/BF,)
fourteen
doal — 2/1 (JH,FH,/BF,)
zym gi — 2/0 (BF,JH,/0)
fifteen
bem — 2/1 (JH,FH,/BF,)
zym ba — 2/0 (BF,JH,/0)
sixteen
dzim — 1/2 (JH,/FH,BF,)
zym vo — 2/0 (BF,JH,/0)
hundred
on — 2/1 (JH,BF,/FH,)
thousand
jol — 2/1 (JH,BF,/FH,)
onon / on on — 1/2 (BF,/JH,FH,)
- A hundred hundreds is ten thousand, not one thousand. --Jim Henry 10:49, 17 April 2011 (PDT)
ten thousand
djulnen — 0/2 (0/FH,JH,)
zym onon — 1/2 (BF,/JH,FH,)
zym jol — 1/0 (JH,/0)
hundred thousand
founh — 1/2 (BF,/FH,JH,)
million
tinem — 2/1 (FH,BF,/JH,)
jol jol — 1/1 (JH,/FH,)
Naeso | |
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General: | Voting • Member list • An Introduction to Naeso |
Phonology and orthography: | Phonology • Stress • Orthography • Transliteration |
Grammar: | Grammar • Suffixes • Prepositions |
Lexicon and corpus: | Naeso-English • English-Naeso • Proposed words • Swadesh • Names • Corpus of Sentences • Math |
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. |