jan Seloki wrote:jan Jojanese wrote:jan Seloki wrote:I personally use a system somebody else came up with derived from Esperanto numbers
1 wan
2 tu
3 sili (tri)
4 kuala (kvar)
5 kuin (kvin)
6 sese (ses)
7 sepe (sep)
8 oku (ok)
9 nawo (naŭ - pronounced like 'now')
10 teke (dek)
11 teke wan
12 teke tu
20 tu teke (dudek)
Few things:
a) all of them are from a single language (and that language is a bad IAL to boot)
b) kuala, kuin and nawo all break toki pona's phonotactic rules. (syllables with only a vowel can only appear as the first syllable of a word, and 'wo' is not allowed at all.)
You're right about kuala, kuin, & nawo although I don't know if there is any practical purpose, or just Sonja's choice. I don't see any reason it really would hurt, at least with the first rule. As for Esperanto being a bad IAL, I disagree, although that's not even a relevant argument against using it for this anyway. If people don't like this script, they can always suggest another one. The idea that having a proper number system goes against toki pona being minimalist is simply stupid.
i agree about proper number systems being good, but i don't think new words are necessary at all
how about this:
numbers work like they do in the wan tu luka mute system
wan 1
tu 2
luka 5
mute 20
kulupu 100
noka 500
pali 1 000
69 is mute mute mute luka tu tu
420 is kulupu kulupu kulupu kulupu mute
666 is noka kulupu mute mute mute luka wan
it keeps minimalism while being more useable