Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Title For Marriage Reception

LEARN TO COUNT IN AYMARA

Tunk K'ATANAKAN AYMARAT JAKHUÑ YATIQAM
By: Reynaldo Elias Rivera Ajata
aymara The basic numbers are:
0 Ch'usa
1
Maya Paya
2 3
Kimsa
Pusi
4 5
Phisqha
6 Suxta
Paqallqu 7 8
Kimsaqallqu
9 Llatunka
must take into account that the numbers 1 and 2 apocopate when they are used in sentences or in the formation of larger quantities. In that sense, they become in mä Maya and Paya .
to build other numbers in this language must be learned in addition to the verbal to ten, hundred and thousand. Then you will be able to tell any number:
10 Tunka
100 Pataka
1000 Waranqa
When it comes to counting numbers by tens the procedure is simple. It said the drive followed by ten, both obviously in Aymara. Thus, we state the number 40:
40 = four ten
which translated into Aymara in aymara is:
Pusi Tunka
Take other examples:
20 = two ten (pa Tunka)
30 = three ten (kimsa Tunka)
50 = five ten (phisqha Tunka)
The mechanism is the same for the hundreds:
200 = two hundred (Pä Pataka)
300 = three hundred (kimsa Pataka)
800 = eight hundred (kimsaqallq Pataka)
course, runners from thousands have these characteristics:
3,000 = three thousand (kimsa Waranqa)
6,000 = six thousand (suxta Waranqa)
In contrast to disseminate intermediate numbers of dozens set out the thousands, hundreds and tens according to the above. However, it is added to the end-NI units, eg 16 = ten
seisNI (Tunka suxtaNI)
With that said you can say any number of aymara:
43 = forty tresNI (pusi Tunk kimsani)
sieteNI 687 = six hundred eighty (Tunk kimsaqallq patak suxta paqalquni)
1400 8425 = eight veinticincoNI (kinsaqallq Waranqa pusi patak Pä Tunk phisqhani)

0 comments:

Post a Comment