Sunday, 10 July 2016

Numerals in Koro Language - language of Ingenious People

Science and culture, 82(5-6) 189-193, 2016
Numerals in Koro Language - language of Ingenious People
Narayan Ch Ghosh*
ABSTRACT
The day when homosepiens invented language jumped a long step in its way to future progress and as the term progress is a continuous changing process language; a structure of progress, cannot be static. Structural changes of languages generating momentum for further changes; and therefore languages are taking new shapes. Contributions in these changes in Society and in language itself are multidimensional. Here author have tried to look to Koro language, a language of India's remote northeast corner that have been identified recently and completely new to science for recasting words use to write Bengali numerals.

INTRODUCTION : Invention to set fire, wheel was the cause of development of humankind. Most outstanding and rapidly evolving development of mankind is undoubtedly the Computer and using computer now man do many thing more accurately, precisely and quickly. With advancement of science and technology life style is rapidly changing. Due to rapid progress of life activities new complex phenomanea evolves and or identified. Zadeh, father of Fuzzy Set, wrote : ‘As the complexity of a system increases, our ability to make precise and yet significant statements about its behavior diminishes until a threshold is reached beyond which  precision and significance (or relevance) become almost mutually exclusive characteristics.’ Existence and progress of homosepiens depends on in Photograph by Chris Rainier, National Geographic[1]    continuous  adoption changed characteristics of the society, to be compatible with scientific     phenomanea that are upgrading with time changing structure and superstructure of the society each and every moment as well as concepts itself. In continuously changing society language,  communicating device of human being, cannot static. Need and changes due to   Photograph by Chris Rainier, National Geographic    scientific development its structure and character is also changing. Due to invention of computer speed of has been increased tremendously. Therefore life speed is now an important factor for changing modulation of language, formation of word, writing sentences in shorter form more precisely and accurately. As mathematics is nothing but a language these are true for mathematics also. If one goes through the change of numeral scripts it is easy for him to visualise how its shapes are been changed with advancement of society[2].
In view of the stated facts one has to look to the way of expression of numeral system in Bengali or to some extend Indian languages. Perhaps it is essential to think for upgradation of existing methods of expression of numeral system in those languages. It is most urgent to make existing system compatible
*Dr. Narayan Ch Ghosh, Professor in Mathematics, having thirty seven years teaching and research experience in India and abroad. Email : ghosnarayan@gmail.com, ghoshnc@rediffmail.com, Phone : 91 033 26803563, 26802365, Mobile : 91 9831100325, 9433870670
with newly invented high speed computer. To understand this easily a chronological picture of the development of digit is given below. It is necessary for learning and memorising Bengali numeral system in shorter form, more simple and effective manner. For discussion one may look to a newly discovered language, in urbanised sense, is indigenous language.    
                                                             After van der Waerden, modified by Philip J. Davis[3]
A news was published in the Science Daily on Oct. 5, 2010 that Linguists reporting from a National Geographic expedition to India's remote northeast corner have identified a language completely new to science[3]. According to them the language, known as Koro, belongs to the Tibeto-Burman language family, a group of some 400 languages that includes Tibetan and Burmese, the linguists said. Although some 150 Tibeto-Burman languages are spoken in India alone, the expedition team has been unable to identify any language closely related to Koro, so distinct is it from the others in the family[4].
Science Daily reported that the expedition was part of National Geographic's Enduring Voices project (http://on.natgeo.com/dDyLox), led by National Geographic Fellows Gregory Anderson, director of the Living Tongues Institute for Endangered Languages, and K. David Harrison an associate professor of linguistics at Swarthmore College. Before the expedition, the team had targeted the remote Arunachal Pradesh state in northeastern India as one of its "Language Hotspots" -- a place on the world map that hosts a rich diversity of languages, many are unwritten, are little studied or documented.
"On a scientist's tally sheet, Koro adds just one entry to the list of 6,909 languages worldwide…. But Koro's contribution is much greater than that tiny fraction would suggest," Harrison writes in "The Last Speakers," newly published by National Geographic Books. "Koro brings an entirely different perspective, history, mythology, technology and grammar to what was known before." A scientific paper on the newly identified language published in volume 71 of the journal Indian Linguistics[5].
The revelation of the new language was bittersweet: Koro is highly endangered. Only about 800 people are believed to speak it -- few under age 20 -- and the language has not been written down. "We were finding something that was making its exit, was on its way out," Anderson said. "And if we had waited 10 years to make the trip, we might not have come across close to the number of speakers we found."
Arunachal Pradesh is considered a "black hole" on the linguistic map: Because a special permit is required to enter the region, few linguists have worked there, and no one has drawn up a reliable list of languages spoken there, their locations or numbers of speakers. The Enduring Voices team began its search in Arunachal Pradesh in 2008 for two poorly known languages -- Aka and Miji -- known to be spoken in one small district. The team, which included Indian linguist Ganesh Murmu of Ranchi University, climbed steep hillsides to reach speakers' villages, going door-to-door among the bamboo houses that sit on stilts; villagers eke out livings raising pigs and cultivating rice and barley. The investigators listened to and recorded the vocabularies of these poorly known tongues, Harrison, Anderson and Murmu began to detect a surprise third language, one locally known as Koro. None of the scientific literature they had studied had reported the existence of a third and completely distinct language in the region -- it's not listed in standard international registries of languages or even in Indian language surveys or censuses. Harrison said, "We didn't have to get far on our word list to realize it was extremely different in every possible way"[6].
The team crossed a rushing mountain river by bamboo raft to reach the tiniest Koro village. They sat on shaded verandas of the stilt-supported houses, making recordings as people shared their vocabularies and life stories in the hidden language of Koro. Thousands of words were captured -- the first known time that Koro was recorded as its own distinct language, Harrison said.
Koro shaped up as distinct from the region's other languages on many levels, the linguists said. Its inventory of sounds was completely different, and so was the way sounds combine to form words. Words also are built differently in Koro, as are sentences. As for example, the Aka word for "mountain" is "phù" while the Koro word is "nggõ." Aka speakers call a pig a "vo" while to Koro speakers, a pig is a "lele." "Koro could hardly sound more different from Aka," Harrison writes in "The Last Speakers." Anderson and Harrison said that Aka is the traditional language of the region's historic slave traders; they hypothesize that Koro may have sprung from the slaves, though they say more study is needed to determine precise origins.

Languages are dying around the world; one blinks out about every two weeks. Linguists consider about half of the world's nearly 7,000 tongues are endangered, the victims of cultural changes, ethnic shame, government repression and other factors[6].

National Geographic's Enduring Voices project works to identify language hotspots, document vanishing languages and cultures, and assist with language revitalization.

What is the value to the speakers of identifying the world's "hidden" languages? "Part of the uniqueness of very small languages is that their speakers may feel a sense of ownership over them," Harrison writes in "The Last Speakers." "In the case of Koro, even though they seem to be gradually giving up their language, it remains the most powerful trait that identifies them as a distinct people. Without it, they are merely part of a larger group within India's population of a billion-plus."

Counting System in Koro Language
Not all languages have numeral systems for counting. Specifically, there is not much need for numeral systems among hunter-gatherers who do not engage in commerce. Many languages around the world have no numerals above two to four. Several languages from the Amazon have been independently reported to have no specific number words other than 'one'. These include Nadëb, pre-contact Mocoví and PilagáCulina and pre-contact  Jarawara,  Jabutí,  Canela-Krahô,  Botocudo (Krenák)Chiquitano, the Campa languagesArabela, and Achuar. Some languages of Australia, such as Warlpiri, do not have words for quantities above two, as did many Khoisan languages at the time of European contact. Such languages do not have a word class of 'numeral'.
Most languages with both numerals and counting use base 8, 10, 12, or 20. Base 10 appears to come from counting one's fingers, base 20 from the fingers and toes, base 8 from counting the spaces between the fingers (attested in California), and base 12 from counting the knuckles (3 each for the four fingers). For very large (and very small) numbers, traditional systems have been superseded by the use of scientific notation and the system of SI prefixes. Traditional systems continue to be used in everyday life[7].
Many languages of Melanesia have (or once had) counting systems based on parts of the body which do not have a numeric base; there are (or were) no numerals, but rather nouns for relevant parts of the body—or simply pointing to the relevant spots—were used for quantities. For example, 1–4 may be the fingers, 5 'thumb', 6 'wrist', 7 'elbow', 8 'shoulder', etc., across the body and down the other arm, so that the opposite pinkie represents a number between 17 (Torres Islands) to 23 (Eleman). For numbers beyond this, the torso, legs and toes may be used, or one might count back up the other arm and back down the first, depending on the people.

Some Austronesian and Melanesian ethnic groups, some Sulawesi and some Papua New Guineans, count with the base number four, using the term asu and aso, the word for dog, as the ubiquitous village dog has four legs. This is argued by anthropologists to be also based on early humans noting the human and animal shared body feature of two arms and two legs as well as its ease in simple arithmetic and counting. As an example of the system's ease a realistic scenario could include a farmer returning from the market with fifty asu heads of pig (200), less 30 asu (120) of pig bartered for 10 asu (40) of goats noting his new pig count total as twenty asu: 80 pigs remaining. The system has a correlation to the dozen counting system and is still in common use in these areas as a natural and easy method of simple arithmetic.

It is known that Quinary systems are based on the number 5. It is almost certain the quinary system developed from counting by fingers (five fingers per hand). An example are the Epi languages of Vanuatu, where 5 is luna 'hand', 10 lua-luna 'two hand', 15 tolu-luna 'three hand', etc. 11 is then lua-luna tai 'two-hand one', and 17 tolu-luna lua 'three-hand two'. 5 is a common auxiliary base, or sub-base, where 6 is 'five and one', 7 'five and two', etc. Aztec was a vigesimal (base-20) system with sub-base 5.

Kanum is a rare example of a language with base 6. The Sko languages, however, are base-24 with a subbase of 6. On the other hand Octal counting systems are based on the number 8. It is used in the Yuki language of California and in the Pamean languages of Mexico, because the Yuki and Pame keep count by using the four spaces between their fingers rather than the fingers themselves.

A majority of traditional number systems are decimal. This dates back at least to the ancient Indians then Egyptians, who used a wholly decimal system. Anthropologists hypothesize this may be due to humans having five digits per hand, ten in total. There are many regional variations including: i. Western system: based on thousands, with variants, ii. Indian system: crorelakh iii. East Asian system: based on ten-thousands.

There is Duodecimal systems are based on 12. These include: Chepang language of Nepal, Mahl language of Minicoy Island in India, Nigerian Middle Belt areas such as JanjiKahugu and the Nimbia dialect of Gwandara, Melanesia, reconstructed proto-Benue–Congo.

Duodecimal numeric systems have some practical advantages over decimal. It is much easier to divide the base digit twelve (which is a highly composite number) by many important divisors in market and trade settings, such as the numbers 234 and 6.

Because of several measurements based on twelve, many Western languages have words for base-twelve units such as dozengross and great gross, which allow for rudimentary duodecimal nomenclature, such as "two gross six dozen" for 360. Ancient Romans used a decimal system for integers, but switched to duodecimal for fractions, and correspondingly Latin developed a rich vocabulary for duodecimal-based fractions. A notable fictional duodecimal system was that of J. R. R. Tolkien's Elvish languages, which used duodecimal as well as decimal.

Vigesimal numbers use the number 20 as the base number for counting. Anthropologists are convinced the system originated from digit counting, as did bases five and ten, twenty being the number of human fingers and toes combined. The system is in widespread use across the world. Some include the classical Mesoamerican cultures, still in use today in the modern indigenous languages of their descendants, namely the Nahuatl and Mayan languages. A modern national language which uses a full vigesimal system is Dzongkha in Bhutan.

Partial vigesimal systems are found in some European languages : BasqueCeltic languagesFrench (from Celtic), Danish, and Georgian. In these languages the systems are vigesimal up to 99, then decimal from 100 up. That is, 140 is 'one hundred two score', not *seven score, and there is no numeral for 400.
The term score originates from tally sticks, and is perhaps a remnant of Celtic vigesimal counting. It was
widely used to learn the pre-decimal British currency in this idiom: "a dozen pence and a score of bob", referring to the 20 shillings in a pound. For Americans the term is most known from the opening of the Gettysburg Address"Four score and seven years ago, our forefathers...".
                      
The Sko languages have a base-24 system with a subbase of 6. Ngiti has base 32.
Ekari has a base-60 system. Sumeria had a base-60 system with a decimal subbase (perhaps aconflation of the decimal and a duodecimal systems of its constituent peoples), which was the origin of the numbering of modern degrees, minutes, and seconds. Supyire is said to have a base-80 system; it counts in twenties (with    5 and 10 as subbases) up to 80, then by eighties up to 400, and then by 400s (great scores).
kàmpwóò
ŋ̀kwuu
sicyɛɛ
béé-tàànre
kɛ́
báár-ìcyɛ̀ɛ̀rè
fourhundred
eighty
four
and
twenty-three
and
ten
and
five-four
799 [i.e. 400 + (4 x 80) + (3 x 20) + {10 + (5 + 4)}]’
Ekari has a base-60 system. Sumeria had a base-60 system with a decimal subbase (perhaps a conflation of the decimal and a duodecimal systems of its constituent peoples), which was the origin of the numbering of modern degrees, minutes, and seconds. Supyire is said to have a base-80 system; it counts in twenties (with    5 and 10 as subbases) up to 80, then by eighties up to 400, and then by 400s (great scores).

Larger numerals
English has derived numerals for multiples of its base (fifty, sixty, etc), and some languages have simplex numerals for these, or even for numbers between the multiples of its base. Balinese, for example, currently has a decimal system, with words for 10, 100, and 1000, but has additional simplex numerals for 25 (with a second word for 25 only found in a compound for 75), 35, 45, 50, 150, 175, 200 (with a second found in a compound for 1200), 400, 900, and 1600. In Hindustani, the numerals between 10 and 100 have become conflated to the extent that they need to be learned independently.

In many languages, numerals up to the base are a distinct part of speech, while the words for powers of the base belong to one of the other word classes. In English, these higher words are hundred 10², thousand 10³, million just 106, and higher powers of a thousand (short scale) or of a million (long scale—see names of large numbers). These words cannot modify a noun without being preceded by an article or numeral, and so are nouns.

In East Asia, the higher units are hundred, thousand, myriad 104, and powers of myriad. In India, they are hundred, thousand, lakh 105,crore 107, and so on. The Mesoamerican system, still used to some extent in Mayan languages, was based on powers of 20: bak’ 400 (20²), pik 8000 (20³), kalab 160,000 (204), etc.
Numerals in Koro Language*
1. ecé
21.  niflá yalí ecé
2. kene / kine/
22.  niflá yalí kene
3. kalá
23.  niflá yalí kalá
4. koblé / kople
24.  niflá yalí koblé
5. plé
25.  niflá yalí plé
6. sufí /sufì/
26.  niflá yalí sufi
7. rõ
27.  niflá yalí rõ
8. ralá /ràla/
28.  niflá yalí ralá
9. ɡayé / ɡaje /
29.  niflá yalí ɡayé
10. fãlá
30.  kaláflá
11. fãlá yalí ecé
40.  kobléflá
12. fãlá yalí kene
50.  pléflá
13. fãlá yalí kalá
60.  sufíflá
14. fãlá yalí koblé
70.  rõflá
15. fãlá yalí plé
80.  raláflá
16. fãlá yalí sufi
90.  ɡayéflá
17. fãlá yalí rõ
100. palá
18. fãlá yalí ralá
200.
19. fãlá yalí ɡayé
1000. paláfélá ( 100 x 10)
20. niflá
2000.  
*Linguist providing data and date : Dr. Kedutso Kapfo, March 6, 2012
Central Institute of Indian Languages, Manasagangori, Mysore. Koro is a newly discovered language spoken by a small community in Arunachal Pradesh of North-East India. This language is first discovered by me in 2005[7].

Conclusion :
From above discussion it is clear, numeral system in Koro language is decimal system. Though it is a language of indigenous people living in most remote areas in India Koro language structure is scientific. Most interesting is in Bengali language to learn numerals from one to hundred number one has to know minimum thirty seven separate words, on the other hand in Koro language, a language of India's remote northeast corner Arunachal Pradesh considered a "black hole" on the linguistic map, has to learn only nineteen words to express the same in Bengali. In some other Indian Language for same learning one has to know more words. Perhaps having seen this mathematics teachers in Bengal or in some other parts in India may be inspired to the find way for minmising the number of words to teach number systems to their child like students in easy way[8]. Linguists may also think to develop idea for minimising number of words for learning number system in Bengali.
References
1.      Chris Rainier   : Photograph published in National Geographic on October 5, 2010
2.      Ghosh, N. C. : A New Look to Mathematics Education. Journal of Centre for Pedagogical Studies in Mathematics, Vol. 31, 2011.
3.      Philip J. Davis : Large Numbers and Their Arithmetic. The Lore of Large Numbers. New Mathematical Library. The L.W. Singer Company, 1961
4.      Morrison, Dan  : Hidden' Language Found in Remote Indian Tribe. National Geographic Daily News. 2010
5.      Lewis, M. Paul (ed.) : Ethnologue: Languages of the World, Sixteenth edition. Dallas, TX: SIL International, Hruso. 2009
6.      Post, Mark W. and Roger Blench : Siangic: A new language phylum in North East India, 6th International Conference of the North East India Linguistics Society, Tezpur University, Assam, India, Jan 31 – Feb 2. 2011
7.      Schmid, Randolph E. : Undocumented language found hidden in India. Associated Press. 5 October 2010,
8.      Ghosh, N. C. : Numerals in Koro. Science India, Vol. 18, No.7 p 27-32, 2015