This section talks about two broad classes of words that further specify the denotation of a noun phrase. Though they are linked in this similar function, as the following will show, they do have different syntaxes. This section is organized as follows:
The number terms in Skerre from one to twenty are quinary (based on five), so the numbers from one to five are the basic terms. They are given below:
Numeral | Skerre |
1 | yat |
2 | has |
3 | siya |
4 | ree |
5 | yan |
The number terms from six to ten are all compounds of the above, with a basic term for ten.
Numeral | Skerre | Literal Translation | |
6 | yan-yat | five-one | |
7 | yan-has | five-two | |
8 | yan-si | five-three | |
9 | yan-re | five-four | |
10 | war | ten |
Eleven to twenty continues much like 6 to 10, using compounds and basic terms for fifteen and twenty.
Numeral | Skerre | Literal Translation | |
11 | war-yat | ten-one | |
12 | war-has | ten-two | |
13 | war-si | ten-three | |
14 | war-re | ten-four | |
15 | set | fifteen | |
16 | set-yat | fifteen-one | |
17 | set-has | fifteen-two | |
18 | set-si | fifteen-three | |
19 | set-re | fifteen-four | |
20 | ari | twenty |
Above 20, the system turns vigesimal (based on twenty). Instead of changing every five units, the base units change every twenty. Counting proceeds as follows:
Numeral | Skerre | Literal Translation | |
21 | ari-yat | twenty-one | |
... | 25 | ari-yan | twenty-five |
... | |||
30 | ari-war | twenty-ten | |
... | |||
39 | ari-set-re | twenty-fifteen-four | |
... | |||
40 | hasari | two-twenties | |
... | |||
60 | siyari | three-twenties | |
... | |||
80 | reyari | four-twenties | |
... | |||
99 | reyari-set-re | four-twenties fifteen-four | |
100 | yanari | five-twenties |
Though this system could be extended higher (and occasionally, it is), native speakers generally stop around 100. For those few Skerre who need higher numbers, they are borrowed from Skarnathi, Northlander, or other trade language. However, there is the term, terek, which means uncountable hundreds or thousands that can be used to refer to high numbers.
In addition to the specific counting terms above, there are several less specific quantifiers. These are listed below:
Skerre | English |
yiket | all, every |
quee | many |
antan | a lot |
haron | half |
hok | some |
atsat | several (a distributive) |
reyir | a quarter |
kii | few |
was | each |
Any of the numeral or less-specific quantifiers can be used alone, as if they were just plain nouns, as in:
Ewor a siya. PFV-go ABS three Three (of them) went.
However, it is more common to find them quantifying a noun. In that case, the quantifier is still preceded by a syntactic marker, like a regular common noun, but it is also followed by the genitive marker, i, and the noun being quantified over, always in the singular, as in the following examples:
E’okin-wo a yan i kinta. PFV-see-TR=1PL.NOM ABS five GEN bird We saw five birds.
Eratin-ti a yiket i yere wakosehan. PFV-capture-TR=3PL.NOM ABS all GEN dog DENOM-NEG-home They captured all the stray dogs.
As noted previously, attributive modifiers appear after the noun. This includes a heterogeneous set of categories, but all of them semantically modify the noun.
a yere quiko ABS dog wet the wet dog
A small number of "adjectives" are nominal in nature. This includes the colors, interrogative adjectives, demonstratives (see below), and a few deictic adjectives, like tetsa, last and kis, previous.
Normally nominal "adjectives" appear after the noun, uninflected, as in the following:
a sakir aska ABS sky blue the blue sky
However, they can optionally take nominal inflection, as in:
a saasakir aa’aska ABS PL~sky PL~blue the blue skies
Members of this latter class also can be used as a nouns, as in:
Sehes a aska. be.dangerous ABS blue The blue (one) is dangerous.
They also behave differently from verbal "adjectives" when predicated — see the "verbless" constructions page.
A subclass of this nominal "adjective" class are the demonstratives. In Skerre, the demonstratives have a three-way distinction: tir, ter, and tar. Tir means close to me (this), ter close to you (that here), and tar close to him/her/it (that yonder), in either a real or metaphorical sense. Note that this is extent of the article-like modifiers, since Skerre does not have words corresponding to English the or a.
Skerre is a 6 basic color-term language. The basic color terms are conventionally translated as following:
Color Term | Translation |
hiyos | white |
sir | black |
ayon | red |
tiya | green |
yisen | yellow |
aska | blue |
Their range of coverage is approximated in the chart below.
hiyos | ayon | yisen | tiya | aska | sir | |||||||||||
|
Of course, there are other non-basic color terms, formed using the various word formation processes in the noun formation section, such as ayonir, pink (lit. little red) and yisen-ayon, orange (lit. yellow-red). Compounds are also made with hesa, light and ros, dark.
Finally, the postnominal modifier position can also be filled with a prepositional phrase, as in:
a yere ni tos ABS dog COM bone the dog with the bone
Forward to Section 12: Pronouns
Back to Section 10: Possession
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