Home PageChapter 31 - Numbers




 1. NUMBERS FROM 1 TO 20: 


  1 KOW 11 KOW IYO TOBAN
  2 LABA 12 LABA IYO TOBAN
  3 SADDEX 13 SADDEX IYO TOBAN
  4 AFAR 14 AFAR IYO TOBAN
  5 SHAN 15 SHAN IYO TOBAN
  6 LIX 16 LIX IYO TOBAN
  7 TODDOBA 17 TODDOBA IYO TOBAN
  8 SIDDEED 18 SIDDEED IYO TOBAN
  9 SAGAAL 19 SAGAAL IYO TOBAN
10 TOBAN 20 LABATAN


 2. TENS: 


10 TOBAN    
20 LABAATAN 60 LIXDAN
30 SODDON 70 TODDOBAATAAN
40 AFARTAAN 80 SIDDEETAAN
50 KONTON 90 SAGAASHAAN


When a ten is followed by a unit, there are two ways to read these numbers!

In northern Somalia, the unit is read first, followed by the ten, while it is the opposite in the south: the ten first, then the unit.

In both cases, unit and ten are linked by the word IYO = and.

EXAMPLES:

Northern Somalia   Southern Somalia
KOW IYO LABAATAN 21 LABAATAN IYO KOW
AFAR IYO SODDON 34 SODDON IYO AFAR
TODDOBA IYO AFARTAN 47 AFARTAN IYO TODDOBA
SHAN IYO LIXDAN 65 SHAN IYO LIXDAN
TODDOBA IYO TODDOBAATAN 77 TODDOBAATAN IYO TODDOBA
SADDEX IYO SIDDEETAN 83 SIDDEETAN IYO SADDEX
SAGAAL IYO SAGAASHAN 99 SAGAASHAN IYO SAGAAL


 3. HUNDREDS: 


The word 100 is called BOQOL


100 BOQOL    
200 LABA BOQOL 600 LIX BOQOL
300 SADDEX BOQOL 700 TODDOBA BOQOL
400 AFAR BOQOL 800 SIDDEED BOQOL
500 SHAN BOQOL 900 SAGAAL BOQOL


When a hundred is followed by tens and units, the word IYO (= and) is used to link them.

EXAMPLES:

101 BOQOL IYO KOW
110 BOQOL IYO TOBAN
111 BOQOL IYO KOW IYO TOBAN
508 SHAN BOQOL IYO SIDDED
528 SHAN BOQOL IYO SIDDED IYO LABAATAN


 4. THOUSANDS: 


The word 1000 is called KUN


1000 KUN    
2000 LABA KUN 6000 LIX KUN
3000 SADDEX KUN 7000 TODDOBA KUN
4000 AFAR KUN 8000 SIDDEED KUN
5000 SHAN KUN 9000 SAGAAL KUN


In numbers containing thousands, hundreds, tens, and units, the word IYO is used to link them.

EXAMPLES:

1001 KUN IYO KOW
1500 KUN IYO SHAN BOQOL
1735 KUN IYO TODDOBAN BOQOL IYO SHAN IYO SODDON
4352 KUN IYO SADDEX BOQOL IYO LABA IYO KONTON
4500 AFAR KUN IYO SHAN BOQOL
7800 TODDOBA KUN IYO SIDDEX BOQOL
8954 SIDDEX KUN IYO SAGAAL BOQOL IYO AFAR IYO KONTON


 5. FRACTIONS: 


1/2 badh a half
1/4 rubuc a quarter


 6. DECIMALS: 


In mathematics, the digit zero is called: SERO (Somali North) or SUFUR (Somali South).
The word for point is: DHIBIC.


EXAMPLES:

0.25    Sero dhibic shan iyo labaatan
0.5    Sero dhibic shan
10.5    Toban dhibic shan
10.25    Toban dhibic shan iyo labaatan
20.125    Labaatan dhibic boqol iyo shan iyo labaatan


 7. ORDINAL NUMBERS: 


To say the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, etc., add the suffix -AAD to the number, with some phonetic adjustments.

The ordinal number follows the definite noun it qualifies.


KOWBAAD Buuga kowbaad The first book
LABAAD Baska labaad The second bus
SADDAXAAD Marka saddaxaad The third time
AFRAAD / AFARAAD Casharka afaraad The fourth lesson
SHANAAD Fasalka shanaad The fifth grade
LIXAAD Hasha lixaad The sixth she-camel
TODDOBAAD Malinta toddobaad The seventh day
SIDEEDAAD Blooga sideedaad The eighth block
SAGAALAAD Bisha sagaalaad The ninth month
TOBNAAD Habeenka tobnaad The tenth night


 8. HOW TO COUNT: 


Numbers in Somali behave like nouns, which means they can take definite suffixes.

Numbers 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 are feminine. All other numbers are masculine.

Numbers are placed before the counted noun: saddex buug = 3 books, laba kabood = 2 shoes, toban dal = 10 countries, etc..

From the examples, we see that the number is absolute, while the counted noun is put in the genitive; however, only nouns whose plural ends in -o have a distinct form in the genitive ending in -ood!

When the counted noun is definite, it's the number that carries the definite suffix: saddexda buug = the 3 books, labada kabood = the 2 shoes, tobanka dal = the 10 countries, etc..


NOTE:

The number 1, KOW, is only used for numerating! When it comes to counting something, we use the words HAL, MID or XABAD.
Examples: hal buug = 1 book, hal kab = 1 shoe, hal dal = 1 country, hal naag = 1 woman, etc..

When "one" is used as a pronoun (he saw one, I took one, she brought one, etc..), we use MID or HAL.
Examples: Hal ii sii = give me one; Mid bay cunaa = he ate one.

When counting a collective or uncountable object, we use the expression hal oo ... ha = "one of".
Examples: laba hal oo muus ah = two bananas ; saddex hal oo muus ah = three bananas, etc..


OTHER EXAMPLES:

Hal buug ah = a book
Xabad furin ah = a bread
Xabad carruur ah = a child
Xabad nacnac ah = a candy
Shan buug = five books
Shan buug oo waweyn = five big books
Saddex jeer = three times
Hal bisad (ah) = a cat
Afar bisadood = four cats
Afar bisadood oo yaryar = four small cats
Afar bisadood oo yaryar oo cadcad = four small white cats
Shan shimbirood = five birds
Todooba malmood = seven days
Laba gacmood = two hands
Laba indhood = two eyes
Saddex carruur ah = three children
Xabad shaah ah = a tea
Koob shaah ah = a cup of tea
Hal koob oo shaah ah = a cup of tea
Shan koob oo shaah ah = five cups of tea
Toban kiilo oo sonkor ah = ten kilograms of sugar



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