
seen from Türkiye
seen from China

seen from Türkiye

seen from Russia
seen from Türkiye
seen from India

seen from United States

seen from India
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Japan

seen from Türkiye

seen from T1
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from China

seen from Dominican Republic
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Australia
seen from China
Guéré Kru girl, Ivory Coast, by Inger VanDyke
Klao Lesson #1: Numerals + Counting!
For your first lesson, let's off with something easy: how to count or slɛ̀!
One - Dôɛ Two - Sɔ́n Three - tan Four - nyìɛ̀ Five - Mù
My favorite thing about Kru is that it is a base five language. This means every value after five is modified with five as the root. For example, instead of "five (mù)" being followed by "six," it is followed by "five plus one (mùnéɛ́do)". Néɛ́ is your modifier. Think of it as saying "plus" in your number. The notable exception is "nine(sopádo)".
Six - mùnéɛ́do Seven - mùnéɛ́sɔ́n Eight - mùnéɛ́tan Nine - sopádo
When you reach ten, you get a new value (puɛ). You start again from ten, the modifier, and your values up to ten.
Ex: 12 is Puɛnéɛ́do, while 18 is Puɛnéɛ́mùnéɛ́tan.
Ten - Puɛ Eleven - Puɛnéɛ́do Twelve - Puɛnéɛ́sɔ́n Thirteen - Puɛnéɛ́tan Fourteen - Puɛnéɛ́nyìɛ̀ Fifteen - Puɛnéɛ́mù Sixteen - Puɛnéɛ́mùnéɛ́do Seventeen - Puɛnéɛ́mùnéɛ́sɔn Eighteen - Puɛnéɛ́mùnéɛ́tan Nineteen - Puɛnéɛ́sopahdo
It may look tedious but the rule is fairly simple.
This rule continues into the rest of the tens values with a twist, so pay attention:
Ten and Twenty are the only unique tens values with their own unique root. The rest of the tens are multiples of twenty with ten added to them if they're odd. So 40 is 20 x 2, while 70 is 20 x 3 + 10. From there, you follow the same steps as in the tens. So your new number construction is as follows: Wlòh (sɔ́n or nyìɛ̀) néɛ́ puɛ (ones value).
Here is a series of twenty to best explain:
Twenty - Wlòh Twenty-one - Wlòhnéɛ́dôɛ Twenty-two - Wlòhnéɛ́sɔ́n Twenty-three - Wlòhnéɛ́tan Twenty-four - Wlòhnéɛ́nyìɛ̀ Twenty-five - Wlòhnéɛ́mù Twenty-six - Wlòhnéɛ́mùnéɛ́do Twenty-seven - Wlòhnéɛ́mùnéɛ́sɔ́n Twenty-eight - Wlòhnéɛ́mùnéɛ́tan Twenty-nine - Wlòhnéɛ́sopádo Thirty - Wlòhnéɛ́puɛ (20 + 10)
There's even bigger numbers of course. But the get slightly easier.
100 - wlòhmù (20 x 5) 200 - wlòhpuɛ (20 x 10) 1000 - fug͡bɛ̀ 2000 - fug͡bɛ̀ sɔ́n (1000 x 2)
Think you got all that? Great! Practice with this Quizlet!
@kimizilla Kimi simps unite 🛐
a few more ocs i made for anotha camp :]
Grebo "War dancer". Half Graway, Maryland County, Liberia. 1978
okay so @mask-knife-is-heimdalls-wife's imagines with indigenous people being taken to pandora to live with the Na'vi is making me cry tears of joy (inside, because I'm very much in class rn).
I'm getting a little inspired and wanted to do some imagines with West African indigenous, so here it is!
Sharing fufu with the Na'vi. The consistency is not disimilar to a different food the Omaticaya have, and they instantly add it to every meal
Plaiting hair! Microbraids, topknot braids, cronrows, fulani styles especially, and weaving in iyun and segi into the hair, maybe even cowries too.
Spider stories. The Na'vi are amused by this trickster spirit and his seemingly endless greed. They take to calling some of the RDA "Nancy's" in an allusion to it.
Word games! Though popular amongst many differnt kinds of indigenous, I'd like to think late night insult battles become a form of entertainment. The Na'vi derive so much delight from hearing a person get called "kpeh boo nah kebeh" (bony butt like monkey ass)
Respect for elders. I feel like this is universal, but the degrees to which indigenous people express it are different. They observe children eating out of their great-grandma's palm and feel a deep sense of kinship, remembering just closely their little ones stick to the seniors of the clan.
That's all I've got for now. Maybe I'll make some oc's for this? Idk, just some ideas.
sjofficial Twitter update 14.08.2020 - Super Junior-K.R.Y