Burmese numerals (Burmese: မြန်မာ ကိန်းဂဏန်းများ, Burmese pronunciation: [mjàɰ̃mà kéiɰ̃ ɡa̰náɰ̃ mjá]) are a set of numerals traditionally used in the Burmese language, although Arabic numerals are also used. Burmese numerals follow the Hindu–Arabic numeral system commonly used in the rest of the world.

Main numbers

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Burmese numerals in various script styles (from the equivalent of zero to nine)

Zero to ten

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The Burmese numerals from 1 to 10 are all etymologically traced back to the Proto-Sino-Tibetan language, with shared cognates in related languages like Tibetan and Chinese.

Number Burmese
Numeral Written
(MLCTS)
IPA
0 သုည1
(su.nya.)
IPA: [θòʊɰ̃ɲa̰]
1 တစ်
(tac)
IPA: [tɪʔ]
2 နှစ်
(hnac)
IPA: [n̥ɪʔ]
3 သုံး
(sum:)
IPA: [θóʊɰ̃]
4 လေး
(le:)
IPA: [lé]
5 ငါး
(nga:)
IPA: [ŋá]
6 ခြောက်
(hkrauk)
IPA: [tɕʰaʊʔ]
7 ခုနစ်
(hku. nac)
IPA: [kʰʊ̀ɰ̃ n̥ɪʔ]2
8 ရှစ်
(hrac)
IPA: [ʃɪʔ]
9 ကိုး
(kui:)
IPA: [kó]
10 ၁၀ ဆယ်
(hcai)
IPA: [sʰɛ̀]

1 Burmese for zero comes from Sanskrit śūnya.
2 Can be abbreviated to IPA: [kʰʊ̀ɰ̃] in list contexts, such as telephone numbers.

Spoken Burmese has innate pronunciation rules that govern numbers when they are combined with another word, be it a numerical place (e.g. tens, hundreds, thousands, etc.) or a measure word.[1]

  • For one, two, and seven (all of which end in the rhyme [-ɪʔ]), when combined, shift to an open vowel, namely the schwa ([ə])
  • For three, four, five, and nine which all have the long tone (similar to the first tone in Mandarin Chinese), when combined, the word immediately following it, given that it begins with a consonant, shifts to a voiced consonant (e.g., ၄၀, "40" is pronounced [lé zɛ̀], not [lé sʰɛ̀]). Other suffixes such as ထောင် ([tʰàʊɰ̃]; thousand), သောင်း ([θáʊɰ̃]; ten thousand), သိန်း ([θéɪɰ̃]; hundred thousand), and သန်း ([θáɰ̃]; million) all shift to ([dàʊɰ̃]; thousand), ([ðáʊɰ̃]; ten thousand), ([ðéɪɰ̃]; hundred thousand), and [ðáɰ̃]; million), respectively.
  • For six and eight, no pronunciation shift occurs.

These pronunciation shifts are exclusively confined to spoken Burmese and are not spelt any differently.

Ten to a million

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While the Burmese numbers from 'hundred' to 'ten thousand' are etymologically traced back to the Proto-Sino-Tibetan language, the numbers for 'hundred thousand' may be an areal word. The numbers beyond 'million' are derived from Pali.

Number Burmese
Numeral Written IPA
10 ၁၀ တစ်ဆယ် IPA: [təsʰɛ̀]1
11 ၁၁ တစ်ဆယ်တစ် IPA: [təsʰɛ̰ tɪʔ] or [sʰɛʔ tɪʔ]
12 ၁၂ တစ်ဆယ်နှစ် IPA: [təsʰɛ̰ n̥ɪʔ] or [sʰɛʔ n̥ɪʔ]
20 ၂၀ နှစ်ဆယ် IPA: [n̥əsʰɛ̀]
21 ၂၁ နှစ်ဆယ့်တစ် IPA: [n̥əsʰɛ̰ tɪʔ] or [n̥əsʰɛʔ tɪʔ]
22 ၂၂ နှစ်ဆယ့်နှစ် IPA: [n̥əsʰɛ̰ n̥ɪʔ] or [n̥əsʰɛʔ n̥ɪʔ]
100 ၁၀၀ ရာ IPA: [jà]
1 000 ၁၀၀၀ ထောင် IPA: [tʰàʊɰ̃]1
10 000 ၁၀၀၀၀ သောင်း IPA: [θáʊɰ̃]1
100 000 ၁၀၀၀၀၀ သိန်း IPA: [θéɪɰ̃]1
1 000 000 ၁၀၀၀၀၀၀ သန်း IPA: [θáɰ̃]1
10 000 000 ၁၀၀၀၀၀၀၀ ကုဋေ IPA: [ɡədè]
1 × 1014 . ကောဋိ IPA: [kɔ́dḭ]
1 × 1021 . ပကောဋိ IPA: [pəkɔ́dḭ]
1 × 1028 . ကောဋိပကောဋိ IPA: [kɔ́dḭpəkɔ́dḭ]
1 × 1035 . နဟုတံ IPA: [nəhoʊ̼ʔtàɰ̃]
1 × 1042 . နိန္နဟုတံ IPA: [neɪɰ̃nəhoʊ̼ʔtàɰ̃]
1 × 1049 . အက္ခဘေိဏီ IPA: [ʔɛʔkʰàbènì]
1 × 1056 . ဗိန္ဒု IPA: [beɪɰ̃du̼]
1 × 1063 . အဗ္ဗုဒ IPA: [àɰ̃bu̼da̼]
1 × 1070 . နိရဗ္ဗုဒ IPA: [ni̼ràɰ̃bu̼da̼]
1 × 1077 . အဗဗ IPA: [ʔəbəba̼]
1 × 1084 . အဋဋ IPA: [ʔətəta̼]
1 × 1091 . သောကန္ဓိက IPA: [θɔ́kàɰ̃di̼ka̼]
1 × 1098 . ဥပ္ပလ IPA: [ʔoʊ̯pəla̼]
1 × 10105 . ကုမုဒ IPA: [ku̼mùda̼]
1 × 10112 . ပဒုမ IPA: [pədùma̼]
1 × 10119 . ပုဏ္ဍရိက IPA: [pòʊ̯dəri̼ka̼]
1 × 10126 . ကထာန IPA: [kətàna̼]
1 × 10133 . မဟာကထာန IPA: [məhàkətàna̼]
1 × 10140 . အသင်္ချေ2 IPA: [əθìɰ̃ tɕʰèi]

1 Shifts to voiced consonant following three, four, five, and nine.

2 Athinche (အသင်္ချေ) sometimes could mean "too large to be counted".

Ten to nineteen are almost always expressed without including တစ် (one).

Another pronunciation rule shifts numerical place name (the tens, hundreds and thousands place) from the low tone to the creaky tone.[1]

  • Number places from 10 (တစ်ဆယ်) up to 107 (ကုဋေ) has increment of 101. Beyond those Number places, larger number places have increment of 107. 1014 (ကောဋိ) up to 10140 (အသင်္ချေ) has increment of 107.
  • There are totally 27 major number places in Burmese numerals from 1×100 to 10140
  • Numbers in the tens place: shift from ဆယ် ([sʰɛ̀], low tone) to ဆယ့် ([sʰɛ̰], creaky tone), except in numbers divisible by ten (10, 20, 30, etc.) In typical speech, the shift goes farther to ([sʰɛʔ] or [zɛʔ]).
  • Numbers in the hundreds place: shift from ရာ ([jà], low tone) to ရာ့ ([ja̰], creaky tone), except for numbers divisible by 100.
  • Numbers in the thousands place: shift from ထောင် ([tʰàʊɰ̃], low tone) to ထောင့် ([tʰa̰ʊɰ̃], creaky tone), except for numbers divisible by 1000.

Hence, a number like 301 is pronounced [θóʊɰ̃ ja̰ tɪʔ] (သုံးရာ့တစ်), while 300 is pronounced [θóʊɰ̃ jà] (သုံးရာ).

The digits of a number are expressed in order of decreasing digits place. For example, 1,234,567 is expressed as follows (where the highlighted portions represent numbers whose tone has shifted from low → creaky:

Numeral 1,000,000 200,000 30,000 4,000 500 60 7
Burmese
IPA [təθáɰ̃]1 [n̥əθeɪɰ̃]1 [θóʊɰ̃ ðáʊɰ̃] [lé da̰ʊɰ̃] [ŋá ja̰] [tɕʰaʊʔ sʰɛ̰] [kʰʊ̀ɰ̃ n̥ɪʔ]
Written တစ်သန်း နှစ်သိန်း သုံးသောင်း လေးထောင့် ငါးရာ့ ခြောက်ဆယ့် ခုနစ်

1 When combined with the numeral place, the pronunciations for 1 and 2 shift from a checked tone (glottal stop) to an open vowel ([ə]).

Round number rule

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When a number is used as an adjective, the standard word order is number + measure word:

five

ခွက်

CL

ခွက်

five CL

'5 cups'

In spoken Burmese, for round numbers (numbers ending in zeroes), the word order is flipped to measure word + number:[2]

ခွက်

CL

၂၀

twenty

ခွက် ၂၀

CL twenty

'20 cups'

The exception to this rule is the number 10, which follows the standard word order.[1]

၁၀

ten

ခွက်

CL

၁၀ ခွက်

ten CL

'10 cups'

Ordinal numbers

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Ordinal numbers, from first to tenth, are Burmese pronunciations of their Pali equivalents.[1] They are prefixed to the noun. Beyond that, cardinal numbers can be raised to the ordinal by suffixing the particle မြောက် ([mjaʊʔ], lit.'to raise') to the number in the following order: number + measure word + မြောက်.

Ordinal Burmese Pali equivalent
Burmese IPA
First ပထမ IPA: [pətʰəma̰] paṭhama[1]
Second ဒုတိယ IPA: [dṵtḭja̰] dutiya[1]
Third တတိယ IPA: [taʔtḭja̰] tatiya[1]
Fourth စတုတ္ထ IPA: [zədoʊʔtʰa̰] catuttha[1]
Fifth ပဉ္စမ IPA: [pjɪ̀ɰ̃səma̰] pañcama[1]
Sixth ဆဋ္ဌမ IPA: [sʰaʔtʰa̰ma̰] chaṭṭhama[1]
Seventh သတ္တမ IPA: [θaʔtəma̰] sattama[1]
Eighth အဋ္ဌမ IPA: [ʔaʔtʰama̰] aṭṭhama[1]
Ninth နဝမ IPA: [nəwəma̰] navama[1]
Tenth ဒသမ IPA: [daʔθəma̰] dasama[1]

Decimal and fractional numbers

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Colloquially, decimal numbers are formed by saying ဒသမ ([daʔθəma̰], Pali for 'tenth') where the decimal separator is located:

ဆယ်

ten

ဒသမ

decimal

တစ်

one

ဆယ် ဒသမ တစ်

ten decimal one

'10.1'

Half (1/2) is expressed primarily by တစ်ဝက် ([təwɛʔ]), although ထက်ဝက်, အခွဲ and အခြမ်း are also used. Quarter (1/4) is expressed with အစိတ် ([ʔəseɪʔ]) or တစ်စိတ်. Other fractional numbers are verbally expressed as follows: denominator + ပုံ ([pòʊɰ̃]) + numerator + ပုံ (lit.'portion'):

လေး

four

ပုံ

portions

သုံး

three

ပုံ

portions

လေး ပုံ သုံး ပုံ

four portions three portions

'3/4'

Alternate numbers

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Other numbers, not of Tibeto-Burman origin, are also found in the Burmese language, usually from Pali or Sanskrit.[3] They are exceedingly rare in modern usage.

Number Pali derivatives Sanskrit derivatives Hindi derivatives
1 ဧက[4] ([ʔèka̰], from Pali eka)
2 ဒွိ[4] ([dwḭ], from Pali dvi)
3 တိ (from Pali ti) တြိ[4] ([tɹḭ], from Sanskrit tri)
4 စတု[4] ([zətṵ], from Pali catu) ဇယ[4] (from Hindi चार)
5 ပဉ္စ ([pjɪ̀ɴsa̰], from Pali pañca)
9 နဝ ([nəwa̰], from Pali nava)

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Okell, John (2002). Burmese By Ear (PDF). The School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London. ISBN 186013758X. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2021-04-20. Retrieved 2015-01-21.
  2. ^ San San Hnin Tun (2014). Colloquial Burmese: The Complete Course for Beginners. Routledge.
  3. ^ Hla Pe (1985). Burma: Literature, Historiography, Scholarship, Language, Life, and Buddhism. Institute of Southeast Asian Studies. p. 64. ISBN 9789971988005.
  4. ^ a b c d e Myanmar-English Dictionary. Myanmar Language Commission. 1993. ISBN 1-881265-47-1.
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