Difference between revisions of "Numerals"
From Scottish Gaelic Grammar Wiki
								
												
				AndrewCarnie (talk | contribs)  | 
				AndrewCarnie (talk | contribs)   | 
				||
| Line 43: | Line 43: | ||
===When used with a noun===  | ===When used with a noun===  | ||
| + | ====1 to 10====  | ||
:{| border=1 cellpadding="5", rules="all" style="text-align:center"  | :{| border=1 cellpadding="5", rules="all" style="text-align:center"  | ||
!English  | !English  | ||
| Line 52: | Line 53: | ||
|aon<sup>L</sup>  | |aon<sup>L</sup>  | ||
|rowspan="2"|singular  | |rowspan="2"|singular  | ||
| + | |aon chat  | ||
|-  | |-  | ||
!2  | !2  | ||
|dha<sup>L</sup>/da<sup>L</sup>  | |dha<sup>L</sup>/da<sup>L</sup>  | ||
| − | |  | + | |da chat  | 
|-  | |-  | ||
!3  | !3  | ||
|tri  | |tri  | ||
| − | |plural  | + | |rowspan="8"|plural  | 
| + | |tri cait  | ||
|-  | |-  | ||
!4  | !4  | ||
|ceithir  | |ceithir  | ||
| + | |ceithir cait  | ||
|-  | |-  | ||
!5  | !5  | ||
|còig  | |còig  | ||
| + | |còig cait  | ||
|-  | |-  | ||
!6  | !6  | ||
|sia  | |sia  | ||
| + | |sia cait  | ||
|-  | |-  | ||
!7  | !7  | ||
|seachd  | |seachd  | ||
| + | |seachd cait  | ||
|-  | |-  | ||
!8  | !8  | ||
|ochd  | |ochd  | ||
| + | |ocht cait  | ||
|-  | |-  | ||
!9  | !9  | ||
|naoi  | |naoi  | ||
| + | |naoi cait  | ||
|-  | |-  | ||
!10  | !10  | ||
|deich  | |deich  | ||
| + | |deich cait  | ||
|}  | |}  | ||
Revision as of 09:38, 13 June 2009
Cardinal Numbers
When used to list phone numbers or count objects without naming them
1 to 10
English Gaelic 1 aonan 2 dha 3 tri 4 ceithir 5 còig 6 sia 7 seachd 8 ochd 9 naoi 10 deich 
When used with a noun
1 to 10
English Gaelic Takes Example 1 aonL singular aon chat 2 dhaL/daL da chat 3 tri plural tri cait 4 ceithir ceithir cait 5 còig còig cait 6 sia sia cait 7 seachd seachd cait 8 ochd ocht cait 9 naoi naoi cait 10 deich deich cait 
Distributive Numbers
e.g. pair, dozen
Distributive Numbers for non-humans
Distributive Numbers for humans
Ordinal Numbers
Ordinal numbers describe a position in a series of objects. In English these are number like first second, third
Other Numbers
Multiplicative Numbers
represents repetition (once, twice, thrice)
Partitive Numbers
expresses a fraction (half, quarter, third)
Integrative-Cumulative Numbers
refer to something made up for several parts single, double, triple