Reconstruction:Proto-Mongolic/ǰirguxan
Proto-Mongolic
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Cardinal : *ǰirguxan | ||
Etymology
[edit]Suggested to be a compound of *jir- (“two”) + *guxa/n (“three”), *jir being the original ordinal number 'two', and *gu(r)ba/n 'three' being the latter component, evidenced by Middle Mongol ᠵᠢᠷᠢᠨ (ǰirin) being used to count two of female beings in the Secret History, Khitan 𘲝 (jur, “two”), and Tungusic teen numeral borrowings from a Mongolic-related language such as Jurchen 只兒歡 (*dʒïrxon, “twelve”) suggesting different original numerals in Pre-Proto-Mongolic.
If it is indeed an innovation, the original Pre-Proto-Mongolic root may have been *nil, as suggested by the Jurchen-Manchu borrowings such as Jurchen 泥渾 (*nixun, “sixteen”) and Jin Dynasty Jurchen 女鲁 (*niol, “six”) and Manchu ᠨᡳᠣᠯᡥᡠᠨ (niolhun, “the sixteenth day of the first month”).
Numeral
[edit]*ǰirguxan
Related terms
[edit]- *ǰiran (“sixty”)
See also
[edit]Descendants
[edit]- Middle Mongol:
- Mongolian: ᠵᠢᠷᠭᠤᠭᠠ (ǰirɣug-a)
- Arabic: جيرڴان (jyrǧân) (Muqaddimat)
- Chinese: 着羅案 (jir(u)wan) (Beilu Yiyu)
- Phags-pa: ꡆꡞꡘꡢꡡꡖꡋ (jirqo'a:n)
- Mongolian:
- Oirat:
- Buryat: зургаан (zurgaan)
- Daur: ǰirɣɔ:
- East Yugur: d͡ʒurɢu:n
- Monguor:
- Mangghuer: jierghuang
- Mongghul: jirighun
- Bonan: tɕərʁoŋ
- Kangjia: ǰirğuŋ
- Dongxiang: dʐʃʁuɔ̃
- Mogholi: ǰurɣɒ:n
References
[edit]- Nugteren, Hans (2011) Mongolic phonology and the Qinghai-Gansu languages (dissertation)[1], Utrecht: LOT, pages 387-8
- The template Template:R:Fried 2010 does not use the parameter(s):
page=132
Please see Module:checkparams for help with this warning.R. W. Fried (2010) A grammar of Bao'an Tu, a Mongolic language of northwest China.[2], State University of New York at Buffalo, archived from the original on 25 July 2021.