FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   90   91   92   93   94   95   96   97   98   99   100   101   102   103   104   105   106   107   108   109   110   111   112   113   114  
115   116   117   118   119   120   121   122   123   124   125   126   127   128   129   130   131   132   133   134   135   136   137   138   139   >>   >|  
= 5 + 5. ALEUTS[294] 1. ataqan. 2. aljak. 3. qankun. 4. sitsin. 5. tsan = my hand. 6. atun = 1 + 5. 7. ulun = 2 + 5. 8. qamtsin = 3 + 5. 9. sitsin = 4 + 5. 10. hatsiq. TCHIGLIT, MACKENZIE R.[295] 1. ataotcirkr. 2. aypak, or malloerok. 3. illaak, or pinatcut. 4. tcitamat. 5. tallemat. 6. arveneloerit. 7. arveneloerit-aypak = 5 + 2. 8. arveneloerit-illaak = 5 + 3. 9. arveneloerit-tcitamat = 5 + 4. 10. krolit. SAHAPTIN (NEZ PERCES).[296] 1. naks. 2. lapit. 3. mitat. 4. pi-lapt = 2 x 2. 5. pachat. 6. oi-laks = [5] + 1. 7. oi-napt = [5] + 2. 8. oi-matat = [5] + 3. 9. koits. 10. putimpt. GREENLAND.[297] 1. atauseq. 2. machdluq. 3. pinasut. 4. sisamat 5. tadlimat. 6. achfineq-atauseq = other hand 1. 7. achfineq-machdluq = other hand 2. 8. achfineq-pinasut = other hand 3. 9. achfineq-sisamat = other hand 4. 10. qulit. 11. achqaneq-atauseq = first foot 1. 12. achqaneq-machdluq = first foot 2. 13. achqaneq-pinasut = first foot 3. 14. achqaneq-sisamat = first foot 4. 15. achfechsaneq? 16. achfechsaneq-atauseq = other foot 1. 17. achfechsaneq-machdlup = other foot 2. 18. achfechsaneq-pinasut = other foot 3. 19. achfechsaneq-sisamat = other foot 4. 20. inuk navdlucho = a man ended. Up to this point the Greenlander's scale is almost purely quinary. Like those of which mention was made at the beginning of this chapter, it persists in progressing by fives until it reaches 20, when it announces a new base, which shows that the system will from now on be vigesimal. This scale is one of the most interesting of which we have any record, and will be noticed again in the next chapter. In many respects it is like the scale of the Point Barrow Eskimo, which was given early in Chapter III. The Eskimo languages are characteristically quinary-vigesimal in their number systems, but few of them present such perfect examples of that method of counting as do the two just mentioned. CHIPPEWAY.[298] 1. bejig. 2. nij. 3. nisswi. 4. niwin. 5. nanun. 6. ningotwasswi = 1 again? 7. nijwasswi = 2 again? 8. nishwasswi = 3 again? 9. jangasswi = 4 again? 10. midasswi = 5 again. MASSACHUSETTS.[299] 1. nequt.
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   90   91   92   93   94   95   96   97   98   99   100   101   102   103   104   105   106   107   108   109   110   111   112   113   114  
115   116   117   118   119   120   121   122   123   124   125   126   127   128   129   130   131   132   133   134   135   136   137   138   139   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

achfechsaneq

 

achfineq

 
sisamat
 

atauseq

 

pinasut

 

arveneloerit

 

achqaneq

 

machdluq

 

chapter

 
vigesimal

sitsin

 
quinary
 
Eskimo
 
tcitamat
 
illaak
 

ALEUTS

 

noticed

 

Barrow

 

record

 

respects


system

 

announces

 

interesting

 

nisswi

 

CHIPPEWAY

 

mentioned

 

MASSACHUSETTS

 

midasswi

 
jangasswi
 

ningotwasswi


nijwasswi

 

nishwasswi

 

characteristically

 

number

 
languages
 
Chapter
 

systems

 
examples
 
method
 

counting


perfect
 
present
 

persists

 

MACKENZIE

 

tadlimat

 

ataotcirkr

 

putimpt

 

GREENLAND

 

TCHIGLIT

 

hatsiq