1880.] JOIMEEALS. 



Phanjah 



Fifty 



Sai-gist 



Sixty 



Saigist-u-dah 



Seventy 



Chyjir-gisfc 



Eighty 



Chyargist-u-dah 



XN illt; u y 



Sir/// 



A hundred 



Shazh-gist 



A Qunciieo. HiitL Tjweiicy 



Hapt-gist 



A hundred and forty 



Hasht-gist 



J\. 111111(11 Ctl dllU. ISlAUj 



Nuh-gist 



A hundred and eighty 



DosacZ/i 



Two hundred 



Hazar ") 



A thousand 





Lak 



One hundred thousand 



Khor 



An indefinitely large number 



The form ja " one" is used with nouns ; ya is used by itself. 

 Counting from sixty upwards is usually done in multiples of twenty, 

 intermediate numbers being reckoned on or back from the nearest 

 multiple ; e. g., 



217 is sai kham yazhdah-gist, i. e., three less eleven- twenties. 

 223 is yazhdah-gist-o-sai, i. e., eleven-twenties and three. 



2. Obdinal Numb EES. 



Pheshi 



First 



Duhmi 



Second 



Saimi 



Third 



Chyarumi 



Fourth 



Phanchumi 



Fifth 



Shashumi 



Sixth 



Haptumi 



Seventh 



Hashtumi 



Eighth 



Nuhmi 



Ninth 



Dahmi 



Tentli 



Yazdami 



Eleventh 



Dwazdami 



Twelfth 



Senzdami 



Thirteenth 



Chyardami 



Fourteenth 



Pha?jzdami 



Fifteenth 



Sha«zdami 



Sixteenth 



Havdami 



Seventeenth 



Hazhdanu 



Eighteenth 



