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The Number Concept: Its Origin and Development

Chapter 15: The Quinary System.
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The study examines how the concept of number arises and develops across languages and cultures, surveying counting practices, limitations of numeral systems, and the origins and formation of number words. It collects and compares cardinal numeral systems in different bases, including binary, quinary, and vigesimal, and traces constructive methods such as additive and subtractive formation. Emphasis is placed on linguistic evidence, comparative lists of numerals, the omission of ordinal treatment, and incidental observations on animal and child numeracy. The work aims to show structural patterns and limits that shape numeral vocabularies while relying on extensive multilingual sources.

Still another instance of quaternary counting, this time carrying with it a suggestion of binary influence, is furnished by the Mocobi207 of the Parana region. Their scale is exceedingly rude, and they use the fingers and toes almost exclusively in counting; only using their spoken numerals when, for any reason, they wish to dispense with the aid of their hands and feet. Their first eight numerals are:

1.iniateda.
2.inabaca.
3.inabacao caini= 2 above.
4.inabacao cainiba= 2 above 2;
or natolatata.
5.inibacao cainiba iniateda= 2 above 2-1;
or natolatata iniateda= 4-1.
6.natolatatata inibaca= 4-2.
7.natolata inibacao-caini= 4-2 above.
8.natolata-natolata= 4-4.

There is probably no recorded instance of a number system formed on 6, 7, 8, or 9 as a base. No natural reason exists for the choice of any of these numbers for such a purpose; and it is hardly conceivable that any race should proceed beyond the unintelligent binary or quaternary stage, and then begin the formation of a scale for counting with any other base than one of the three natural bases to which allusion has already been made. Now and then some anomalous fragment is found imbedded in an otherwise regular system, which carries us back to the time when the savage was groping his way onward in his attempt to give expression to some number greater than any he had ever used before; and now and then one of these fragments is such as to lead us to the border land of the might-have-been, and to cause us to speculate on the possibility of so great a numerical curiosity as a senary or a septenary scale. The Bretons call 18 triouec'h, 3-6, but otherwise their language contains no hint of counting by sixes; and we are left at perfect liberty to theorize at will on the existence of so unusual a number word. Pott remarks208 that the Bolans, of western Africa, appear to make some use of 6 as their number base, but their system, taken as a whole, is really a quinary-decimal. The language of the Sundas,209 or mountaineers of Java, contains traces of senary counting. The Akra words for 7 and 8, paggu and paniu, appear to mean 6-1 and 7-1, respectively; and the same is true of the corresponding Tambi words pagu and panjo.210 The Watji tribe211 call 6 andee, and 7 anderee, which probably means 6-1. These words are to be regarded as accidental variations on the ordinary laws of formation, and are no more significant of a desire to count by sixes than is the Wallachian term deu-maw, which expresses 18 as 2-9, indicates the existence of a scale of which 9 is the base. One remarkably interesting number system is that exhibited by the Mosquito tribe212 of Central America, who possess an extensive quinary-vigesimal scale containing one binary and three senary compounds. The first ten words of this singular scale, which has already been quoted, are:

1.kumi.
2.wal.
3.niupa.
4.wal-wal= 2-2.
5.mata-sip= fingers of one hand.
6.matlalkabe.
7.matlalkabe pura kumi= 6 + 1.
8.matlalkabe pura wal= 6 + 2.
9.matlalkabe pura niupa= 6 + 3.
10.mata-wal-sip= fingers of the second hand.

In passing from 6 to 7, this tribe, also, has varied the almost universal law of progression, and has called 7 6-1. Their 8 and 9 are formed in a similar manner; but at 10 the ordinary method is resumed, and is continued from that point onward. Few number systems contain as many as three numerals which are associated with 6 as their base. In nearly all instances we find such numerals singly, or at most in pairs; and in the structure of any system as a whole, they are of no importance whatever. For example, in the Pawnee, a pure decimal scale, we find the following odd sequence:213

6.shekshabish.
7.petkoshekshabish= 2-6, i.e. 2d 6.
8.touwetshabish= 3-6, i.e. 3d 6.
9.loksherewa= 10 − 1.

In the Uainuma scale the expressions for 7 and 8 are obviously referred to 6, though the meaning of 7 is not given, and it is impossible to guess what it really does signify. The numerals in question are:214

6.aira-ettagapi.
7.aira-ettagapi-hairiwigani-apecapecapsi.
8.aira-ettagapi-matschahma= 6 + 2.

In the dialect of the Mille tribe a single trace of senary counting appears, as the numerals given below show:215

6.dildjidji.
7.dildjidji me djuun= 6 + 1.

Finally, in the numerals used by the natives of the Marshall Islands, the following curiously irregular sequence also contains a single senary numeral:216

6.thil thino= 3 + 3.
7.thilthilim-thuon= 6 + 1.
8.rua-li-dok= 10 − 2.
9.ruathim-thuon= 10 − 2 + 1.

Many years ago a statement appeared which at once attracted attention and awakened curiosity. It was to the effect that the Maoris, the aboriginal inhabitants of New Zealand, used as the basis of their numeral system the number 11; and that the system was quite extensively developed, having simple words for 121 and 1331, i.e. for the square and cube of 11. No apparent reason existed for this anomaly, and the Maori scale was for a long time looked upon as something quite exceptional and outside all ordinary rules of number-system formation. But a closer and more accurate knowledge of the Maori language and customs served to correct the mistake, and to show that this system was a simple decimal system, and that the error arose from the following habit. Sometimes when counting a number of objects the Maoris would put aside 1 to represent each 10, and then those so set aside would afterward be counted to ascertain the number of tens in the heap. Early observers among this people, seeing them count 10 and then set aside 1, at the same time pronouncing the word tekau, imagined that this word meant 11, and that the ignorant savage was making use of this number as his base. This misconception found its way into the early New Zealand dictionary, but was corrected in later editions. It is here mentioned only because of the wide diffusion of the error, and the interest it has always excited.217

Aside from our common decimal scale, there exist in the English language other methods of counting, some of them formal enough to be dignified by the term system—as the sexagesimal method of measuring time and angular magnitude; and the duodecimal system of reckoning, so extensively used in buying and selling. Of these systems, other than decimal, two are noticed by Tylor,218 and commented on at some length, as follows:

“One is the well-known dicing set, ace, deuce, tray, cater, cinque, size; thus size-ace is 6-1, cinques or sinks, double 5. These came to us from France, and correspond with the common French numerals, except ace, which is Latin as, a word of great philological interest, meaning ‘one.’ The other borrowed set is to be found in the Slang Dictionary. It appears that the English street-folk have adopted as a means of secret communication a set of Italian numerals from the organ-grinders and image-sellers, or by other ways through which Italian or Lingua Franca is brought into the low neighbourhoods of London. In so doing they have performed a philological operation not only curious but instructive. By copying such expressions as due soldi, tre soldi, as equivalent to ‘twopence,’ ‘threepence,’ the word saltee became a recognized slang term for ‘penny’; and pence are reckoned as follows:

oney saltee1d.uno soldo.
dooe saltee2d.due soldi.
tray saltee3d.tre soldi.
quarterer saltee4d.quattro soldi.
chinker saltee5d.cinque soldi.
say saltee6d.sei soldi.
say oney saltee, or setter saltee7d.sette soldi.
say dooe saltee, or otter saltee8d.otto soldi.
say tray saltee, or nobba saltee9d.nove soldi.
say quarterer saltee, or dacha saltee10d.dieci soldi.
say chinker saltee or dacha oney saltee11d.undici soldi.
oney beong1s.
a beong say saltee1s. 6d.
dooe beong say saltee, or madza caroon2s. 6d.(half-crown, mezza corona).

One of these series simply adopts Italian numerals decimally. But the other, when it has reached 6, having had enough of novelty, makes 7 by 6-1, and so forth. It is for no abstract reason that 6 is thus made the turning-point, but simply because the costermonger is adding pence up to the silver sixpence, and then adding pence again up to the shilling. Thus our duodecimal coinage has led to the practice of counting by sixes, and produced a philological curiosity, a real senary notation.”

In addition to the two methods of counting here alluded to, another may be mentioned, which is equally instructive as showing how readily any special method of reckoning may be developed out of the needs arising in connection with any special line of work. As is well known, it is the custom in ocean, lake, and river navigation to measure soundings by the fathom. On the Mississippi River, where constant vigilance is needed because of the rapid shifting of sand-bars, a special sounding nomenclature has come into vogue,219 which the following terms will illustrate:

5ft.= five feet.
6ft.= six feet.
9ft.= nine feet.
10-1/2ft.= a quarter less twain; i.e. a quarter of a fathom less than 2.
12ft.= mark twain.
13-1/2ft.= a quarter twain.
16-1/2ft.= a quarter less three.
18ft.= mark three.
19-1/2ft.= a quarter three.
24ft.= deep four.

As the soundings are taken, the readings are called off in the manner indicated in the table; 10-1/2 feet being “a quarter less twain,” 12 feet “mark twain,” etc. Any sounding above “deep four” is reported as “no bottom.” In the Atlantic and Gulf waters on the coast of this country the same system prevails, only it is extended to meet the requirements of the deeper soundings there found, and instead of “six feet,” “mark twain,” etc., we find the fuller expressions, “by the mark one,” “by the mark two,” and so on, as far as the depth requires. This example also suggests the older and far more widely diffused method of reckoning time at sea by bells; a system in which “one bell,” “two bells,” “three bells,” etc., mark the passage of time for the sailor as distinctly as the hands of the clock could do it. Other examples of a similar nature will readily suggest themselves to the mind.

Two possible number systems that have, for purely theoretical reasons, attracted much attention, are the octonary and the duodecimal systems. In favour of the octonary system it is urged that 8 is an exact power of 2; or in other words, a large number of repeated halves can be taken with 8 as a starting-point, without producing a fractional result. With 8 as a base we should obtain by successive halvings, 4, 2, 1. A similar process in our decimal scale gives 5, 2-1/2, 1-1/4. All this is undeniably true, but, granting the argument up to this point, one is then tempted to ask “What of it?” A certain degree of simplicity would thereby be introduced into the Theory of Numbers; but the only persons sufficiently interested in this branch of mathematics to appreciate the benefit thus obtained are already trained mathematicians, who are concerned rather with the pure science involved, than with reckoning on any special base. A slightly increased simplicity would appear in the work of stockbrokers, and others who reckon extensively by quarters, eighths, and sixteenths. But such men experience no difficulty whatever in performing their mental computations in the decimal system; and they acquire through constant practice such quickness and accuracy of calculation, that it is difficult to see how octonary reckoning would materially assist them. Altogether, the reasons that have in the past been adduced in favour of this form of arithmetic seem trivial. There is no record of any tribe that ever counted by eights, nor is there the slightest likelihood that such a system could ever meet with any general favour. It is said that the ancient Saxons used the octonary system,220 but how, or for what purposes, is not stated. It is not to be supposed that this was the common system of counting, for it is well known that the decimal scale was in use as far back as the evidence of language will take us. But the field of speculation into which one is led by the octonary scale has proved most attractive to some, and the conclusion has been soberly reached, that in the history of the Aryan race the octonary was to be regarded as the predecessor of the decimal scale. In support of this theory no direct evidence is brought forward, but certain verbal resemblances. Those ignes fatuii of the philologist are made to perform the duty of supporting an hypothesis which would never have existed but for their own treacherous suggestions. Here is one of the most attractive of them:

Between the Latin words novus, new, and novem, nine, there exists a resemblance so close that it may well be more than accidental. Nine is, then, the new number; that is, the first number on a new count, of which 8 must originally have been the base. Pursuing this thought by investigation into different languages, the same resemblance is found there. Hence the theory is strengthened by corroborative evidence. In language after language the same resemblance is found, until it seems impossible to doubt, that in prehistoric times, 9 was the new number—the beginning of a second tale. The following table will show how widely spread is this coincidence:

Sanskrit, navan= 9.nava= new.
Persian, nuh= 9.nau= new.
Greek, ἐννέα= 9.νέος= new.
Latin, novem= 9.novus= new.
German, neun= 9.neu= new.
Swedish, nio= 9.ny= new.
Dutch, negen= 9.nieuw= new.
Danish, ni= 9.ny= new.
Icelandic, nyr= 9.niu= new.
English, nine= 9.new= new.
French, neuf= 9.nouveau= new.
Spanish, nueve= 9.neuvo= new.
Italian, nove= 9.nuovo= new.
Portuguese, nove= 9.novo= new.
Irish, naoi= 9.nus= new.
Welsh, naw= 9.newydd= new.
Breton, nevez= 9.nuhue= new.221

This table might be extended still further, but the above examples show how widely diffused throughout the Aryan languages is this resemblance. The list certainly is an impressive one, and the student is at first thought tempted to ask whether all these resemblances can possibly have been accidental. But a single consideration sweeps away the entire argument as though it were a cobweb. All the languages through which this verbal likeness runs are derived directly or indirectly from one common stock; and the common every-day words, “nine” and “new,” have been transmitted from that primitive tongue into all these linguistic offspring with but little change. Not only are the two words in question akin in each individual language, but they are akin in all the languages. Hence all these resemblances reduce to a single resemblance, or perhaps identity, that between the Aryan words for “nine” and “new.” This was probably an accidental resemblance, no more significant than any one of the scores of other similar cases occurring in every language. If there were any further evidence of the former existence of an Aryan octonary scale, the coincidence would possess a certain degree of significance; but not a shred has ever been produced which is worthy of consideration. If our remote ancestors ever counted by eights, we are entirely ignorant of the fact, and must remain so until much more is known of their language than scholars now have at their command. The word resemblances noted above are hardly more significant than those occurring in two Polynesian languages, the Fatuhivan and the Nakuhivan,222 where “new” is associated with the number 7. In the former case 7 is fitu, and “new” is fou; in the latter 7 is hitu, and “new” is hou. But no one has, because of this likeness, ever suggested that these tribes ever counted by the senary method. Another equally trivial resemblance occurs in the Tawgy and the Kamassin languages,223 thus:

Tawgy.
8.siti-data= 2 × 4.
9.nameaitjuma= another.
Kamassin.
8.sin-the'de= 2 × 4.
9.amithun= another.

But it would be childish to argue, from this fact alone, that either 4 or 8 was the number base used.

In a recent antiquarian work of considerable interest, the author examines into the question of a former octonary system of counting among the various races of the world, particularly those of Asia, and brings to light much curious and entertaining material respecting the use of this number. Its use and importance in China, India, and central Asia, as well as among some of the islands of the Pacific, and in Central America, leads him to the conclusion that there was a time, long before the beginning of recorded history, when 8 was the common number base of the world. But his conclusion has no basis in his own material even. The argument cannot be examined here, but any one who cares to investigate it can find there an excellent illustration of the fact that a pet theory may take complete possession of its originator, and reduce him finally to a state of infantile subjugation.224

Of all numbers upon which a system could be based, 12 seems to combine in itself the greatest number of advantages. It is capable of division by 2, 3, 4, and 6, and hence admits of the taking of halves, thirds, quarters, and sixths of itself without the introduction of fractions in the result. From a commercial stand-point this advantage is very great; so great that many have seriously advocated the entire abolition of the decimal scale, and the substitution of the duodecimal in its stead. It is said that Charles XII. of Sweden was actually contemplating such a change in his dominions at the time of his death. In pursuance of this idea, some writers have gone so far as to suggest symbols for 10 and 11, and to recast our entire numeral nomenclature to conform to the duodecimal base.225 Were such a change made, we should express the first nine numbers as at present, 10 and 11 by new, single symbols, and 12 by 10. From this point the progression would be regular, as in the decimal scale—only the same combination of figures in the different scales would mean very different things. Thus, 17 in the decimal scale would become 15 in the duodecimal; 144 in the decimal would become 100 in the duodecimal; and 1728, the cube of the new base, would of course be represented by the figures 1000.

It is impossible that any such change can ever meet with general or even partial favour, so firmly has the decimal scale become intrenched in its position. But it is more than probable that a large part of the world of trade and commerce will continue to buy and sell by the dozen, the gross, or some multiple or fraction of the one or the other, as long as buying and selling shall continue. Such has been its custom for centuries, and such will doubtless be its custom for centuries to come. The duodecimal is not a natural scale in the same sense as are the quinary, the decimal, and the vigesimal; but it is a system which is called into being long after the complete development of one of the natural systems, solely because of the simple and familiar fractions into which its base is divided. It is the scale of civilization, just as the three common scales are the scales of nature. But an example of its use was long sought for in vain among the primitive races of the world. Humboldt, in commenting on the number systems of the various peoples he had visited during his travels, remarked that no race had ever used exclusively that best of bases, 12. But it has recently been announced226 that the discovery of such a tribe had actually been made, and that the Aphos of Benuë, an African tribe, count to 12 by simple words, and then for 13 say 12-1, for 14, 12-2, etc. This report has yet to be verified, but if true it will constitute a most interesting addition to anthropological knowledge.

Chapter VI.

The Quinary System.

The origin of the quinary mode of counting has been discussed with some fulness in a preceding chapter, and upon that question but little more need be said. It is the first of the natural systems. When the savage has finished his count of the fingers of a single hand, he has reached this natural number base. At this point he ceases to use simple numbers, and begins the process of compounding. By some one of the numerous methods illustrated in earlier chapters, he passes from 5 to 10, using here the fingers of his second hand. He now has two fives; and, just as we say “twenty,” i.e. two tens, he says “two hands,” “the second hand finished,” “all the fingers,” “the fingers of both hands,” “all the fingers come to an end,” or, much more rarely, “one man.” That is, he is, in one of the many ways at his command, saying “two fives.” At 15 he has “three hands” or “one foot”; and at 20 he pauses with “four hands,” “hands and feet,” “both feet,” “all the fingers of hands and feet,” “hands and feet finished,” or, more probably, “one man.” All these modes of expression are strictly natural, and all have been found in the number scales which were, and in many cases still are, in daily use among the uncivilized races of mankind.

In its structure the quinary is the simplest, the most primitive, of the natural systems. Its base is almost always expressed by a word meaning “hand,” or by some equivalent circumlocution, and its digital origin is usually traced without difficulty. A consistent formation would require the expression of 10 by some phrase meaning “two fives,” 15 by “three fives,” etc. Such a scale is the one obtained from the Betoya language, already mentioned in Chapter III., where the formation of the numerals is purely quinary, as the following indicate:227

5.teente= 1 hand.
10.cayaente, or caya huena= 2 hands.
15.toazumba-ente= 3 hands.
20.caesa-ente= 4 hands.

The same formation appears, with greater or less distinctness, in many of the quinary scales already quoted, and in many more of which mention might be made. Collecting the significant numerals from a few such scales, and tabulating them for the sake of convenience of comparison, we see this point clearly illustrated by the following:

Tamanac.
5.amnaitone= 1 hand.
10.amna atse ponare= 2 hands.
Arawak, Guiana.
5.abba tekkabe= 1 hand.
10.biamantekkabe= 2 hands.
Jiviro.
5.alacötegladu= 1 hand.
10.catögladu= 2 hands.
Niam Niam
5.biswe
10.bauwe= 2d 5.
Nengones
5.se dono= the end (of the fingers of 1 hand).
10.rewe tubenine= 2 series (of fingers).
Sesake.228
5.lima= hand.
10.dua lima= 2 hands.
Ambrym.229
5.lim= hand.
10.ra-lim= 2 hands.
Pama.229
5.e-lime= hand.
10.ha-lua-lim= the 2 hands.
Dinka.230
5.wdyets.
10.wtyer, or wtyar= 5 × 2.
Bari
5.kanat
10.puök= 5 + 5?
Kanuri
5.ugu.
10.megu= 2 × 5.
Rio Norte and San Antonio.231
5.juyopamauj.
10.juyopamauj ajte= 5 × 2.
Api.232
5.lima.
10.lua-lima= 2 × 5.
Erromango
5.suku-rim.
10.nduru-lim= 2 × 5.
Tlingit, British Columbia.233
5.kedjin (from djin = hand).
10.djinkat= both hands?

Thus far the quinary formation is simple and regular; and in view of the evidence with which these and similar illustrations furnish us, it is most surprising to find an eminent authority making the unequivocal statement that the number 10 is nowhere expressed by 2 fives234—that all tribes which begin their count on a quinary base express 10 by a simple word. It is a fact, as will be fully illustrated in the following pages, that quinary number systems, when extended, usually merge into either the decimal or the vigesimal. The result is, of course, a compound of two, and sometimes of three, systems in one scale. A pure quinary or vigesimal number system is exceedingly rare; but quinary scales certainly do exist in which, as far as we possess the numerals, no trace of any other influence appears. It is also to be noticed that some tribes, like the Eskimos of Point Barrow, though their systems may properly be classed as mixed systems, exhibit a decided preference for 5 as a base, and in counting objects, divided into groups of 5, obtaining the sum in this way.235

But the savage, after counting up to 10, often finds himself unconsciously impelled to depart from his strict reckoning by fives, and to assume a new basis of reference. Take, for example, the Zuñi system, in which the first 2 fives are:

5.öpte= the notched off.
10.astem'thla= all the fingers.

It will be noticed that the Zuñi does not say “two hands,” or “the fingers of both hands,” but simply “all the fingers.” The 5 is no longer prominent, but instead the mere notion of one entire count of the fingers has taken its place. The division of the fingers into two sets of five each is still in his mind, but it is no longer the leading idea. As the count proceeds further, the quinary base may be retained, or it may be supplanted by a decimal or a vigesimal base. How readily the one or the other may predominate is seen by a glance at the following numerals:

Galibi.236
5.atoneigne oietonaï= 1 hand.
10.oia batoue= the other hand.
20.poupoupatoret oupoume= feet and hands.
40.opoupoume= twice the feet and hands.
Guarani.237
5.ace popetei= 1 hand.
10.ace pomocoi= 2 hands.
20.acepo acepiabe= hands and feet.
Fate.238
5.lima= hand.
10.relima= 2 hands.
20.relima rua= (2 × 5) × 2.
Kiriri
5.mibika misa= 1 hand.
10.mikriba misa sai= both hands.
20.mikriba nusa ideko ibi sai= both hands together with the feet.
Zamuco
5.tsuena yimana-ite= ended 1 hand.
10.tsuena yimana-die= ended both hands.
20.tsuena yiri-die= ended both feet.
Pikumbul
5.mulanbu.
10.bularin murra= belonging to the two hands.
15.mulanba dinna= 5 toes added on (to the 10 fingers).
20.bularin dinna= belonging to the 2 feet.
Yaruros.239
5.kani-iktsi-mo= 1 hand alone.
10.yowa-iktsi-bo= all the hands.
15.kani-tao-mo= 1 foot alone.
20.kani-pume= 1 man.

By the time 20 is reached the savage has probably allowed his conception of any aggregate to be so far modified that this number does not present itself to his mind as 4 fives. It may find expression in some phraseology such as the Kiriris employ—“both hands together with the feet”—or in the shorter “ended both feet” of the Zamucos, in which case we may presume that he is conscious that his count has been completed by means of the four sets of fives which are furnished by his hands and feet. But it is at least equally probable that he instinctively divides his total into 2 tens, and thus passes unconsciously from the quinary into the decimal scale. Again, the summing up of the 10 fingers and 10 toes often results in the concept of a single whole, a lump sum, so to speak, and the savage then says “one man,” or something that gives utterance to this thought of a new unit. This leads the quinary into the vigesimal scale, and produces the combination so often found in certain parts of the world. Thus the inevitable tendency of any number system of quinary origin is toward the establishment of another and larger base, and the formation of a number system in which both are used. Wherever this is done, the greater of the two bases is always to be regarded as the principal number base of the language, and the 5 as entirely subordinate to it. It is hardly correct to say that, as a number system is extended, the quinary element disappears and gives place to the decimal or vigesimal, but rather that it becomes a factor of quite secondary importance in the development of the scale. If, for example, 8 is expressed by 5-3 in a quinary decimal system, 98 will be 9 × 10 + 5-3. The quinary element does not disappear, but merely sinks into a relatively unimportant position.

One of the purest examples of quinary numeration is that furnished by the Betoya scale, already given in full in Chapter III., and briefly mentioned at the beginning of this chapter. In the simplicity and regularity of its construction it is so noteworthy that it is worth repeating, as the first of the long list of quinary systems given in the following pages. No further comment is needed on it than that already made in connection with its digital significance. As far as given by Dr. Brinton the scale is:

1.tey.
2.cayapa.
3.toazumba.
4.cajezea= 2 with plural termination.
5.teente= hand.
6.teyente tey= hand 1.
7.teyente cayapa= hand 2.
8.teyente toazumba= hand 3.
9.teyente caesea= hand 4.
10.caya ente, or caya huena= 2 hands.
11.caya ente-tey= 2 hands 1.
15.toazumba-ente= 3 hands.
16.toazumba-ente-tey= 3 hands 1.
20.caesea ente= 4 hands.

A far more common method of progression is furnished by languages which interrupt the quinary formation at 10, and express that number by a single word. Any scale in which this takes place can, from this point onward, be quinary only in the subordinate sense to which allusion has just been made. Examples of this are furnished in a more or less perfect manner by nearly all so-called quinary-vigesimal and quinary-decimal scales. As fairly representing this phase of number-system structure, I have selected the first 20 numerals from the following languages:

Welsh.240
1.un.
2.dau.
3.tri.
4.pedwar.
5.pump.
6.chwech.
7.saith.
8.wyth.
9.naw.
10.deg.
11.un ar ddeg= 1 + 10.
12.deuddeg= 2 + 10.
13.tri ar ddeg= 3 + 10.
14.pedwar ar ddeg= 4 + 10.
15.pymtheg= 5 + 10.
16.un ar bymtheg= 1 + 5 + 10.
17.dau ar bymtheg= 2 + 5 + 10.
18.tri ar bymtheg= 3 + 5 + 10.
19.pedwar ar bymtheg= 4 + 5 + 10.
20.ugain.
Nahuatl.241
1.ce.
2.ome.
3.yei.
4.naui.
5.macuilli.
6.chiquacen= [5] + 1.
7.chicome= [5] + 2.
8.chicuey= [5] + 3.
9.chiucnaui= [5] + 4.
10.matlactli.
11.matlactli oce= 10 + 1.
12.matlactli omome= 10 + 2.
13.matlactli omey= 10 + 3.
14.matlactli onnaui= 10 + 4.
15.caxtolli.
16.caxtolli oce= 15 + 1.
17.caxtolli omome= 15 + 2.
18.caxtolli omey= 15 + 3.
19.caxtolli onnaui= 15 + 4.
20.cempualli= 1 account.
Canaque242 New Caledonia.
1.chaguin.
2.carou.
3.careri.
4.caboue
5.cani.
6.cani-mon-chaguin= 5 + 1.
7.cani-mon-carou= 5 + 2.
8.cani-mon-careri= 5 + 3.
9.cani-mon-caboue= 5 + 4.
10.panrere.
11.panrere-mon-chaguin= 10 + 1.
12.panrere-mon-carou= 10 + 2.
13.panrere-mon-careri= 10 + 3.
14.panrere-mon-caboue= 10 + 4.
15.panrere-mon-cani= 10 + 5.
16.panrere-mon-cani-mon-chaguin= 10 + 5 + 1.
17.panrere-mon-cani-mon-carou= 10 + 5 + 2.
18.panrere-mon-cani-mon-careri= 10 + 5 + 3.
19.panrere-mon-cani-mon-caboue= 10 + 5 + 4.
20.jaquemo= 1 person.
Guato.243
1.cenai.
2.dououni.
3.coum.
4.dekai.
5.quinoui.
6.cenai-caicaira= 1 on the other?
7.dououni-caicaira= 2 on the other?
8.coum-caicaira= 3 on the other?
9.dekai-caicaira= 4 on the other?
10.quinoi-da= 5 × 2.
11.cenai-ai-caibo= 1 + (the) hands.
12.dououni-ai-caibo= 2 + 10.
13.coum-ai-caibo= 3 + 10.
14.dekai-ai-caibo= 4 + 10.
15.quin-oibo= 5 × 3.
16.cenai-ai-quacoibo= 1 + 15.
17.dououni-ai-quacoibo= 2 + 15.
18.coum-ai-quacoibo= 3 + 15.
19.dekai-ai-quacoibo= 4 + 15.
20.quinoui-ai-quacoibo= 5 + 15.

The meanings assigned to the numerals 6 to 9 are entirely conjectural. They obviously mean 1, 2, 3, 4, taken a second time, and as the meanings I have given are often found in primitive systems, they have, at a venture, been given here.

Lifu, Loyalty Islands.244
1.ca.
2.lue.
3.koeni.
4.eke.
5.tji pi.
6.ca ngemen= 1 above.
7.lue ngemen= 2 above.
8.koeni ngemen= 3 above.
9.eke ngemen= 4 above.
10.lue pi= 2 × 5.
11.ca ko.
12.lue ko.
13.koeni ko.
14.eke ko.
15.koeni pi= 3 × 5.
16.ca huai ano.
17.lua huai ano.
18.koeni huai ano.
19.eke huai ano.
20.ca atj= 1 man.
Bongo.245
1.kotu.
2.ngorr.
3.motta.
4.neheo.
5.mui.
6.dokotu= [5] + 1.
7.dongorr= [5] + 2.
8.domotta= [5] + 3.
9.doheo= [5] + 4.
10.kih.
11.ki dokpo kotu= 10 + 1.
12.ki dokpo ngorr= 10 + 2.
13.ki dokpo motta= 10 + 3.
14.ki dokpo neheo= 10 + 4.
15.ki dokpo mui= 10 + 5.
16.ki dokpo mui do mui okpo kotu= 10 + 5 more, to 5, 1 more.
17.ki dokpo mui do mui okpo ngorr= 10 + 5 more, to 5, 2 more.
18.ki dokpo mui do mui okpo motta= 10 + 5 more, to 5, 3 more.
19.ki dokpo mui do mui okpo nehea= 10 + 5 more, to 5, 4 more.
20.mbaba kotu.

Above 20, the Lufu and the Bongo systems are vigesimal, so that they are, as a whole, mixed systems.

The Welsh scale begins as though it were to present a pure decimal structure, and no hint of the quinary element appears until it has passed 15. The Nahuatl, on the other hand, counts from 5 to 10 by the ordinary quinary method, and then appears to pass into the decimal form. But when 16 is reached, we find the quinary influence still persistent; and from this point to 20, the numeral words in both scales are such as to show that the notion of counting by fives is quite as prominent as the notion of referring to 10 as a base. Above 20 the systems become vigesimal, with a quinary or decimal structure appearing in all numerals except multiples of 20. Thus, in Welsh, 36 is unarbymtheg ar ugain, 1 + 5 + 10 + 20; and in Nahuatl the same number is cempualli caxtolli oce, 20 + 15 + 1. Hence these and similar number systems, though commonly alluded to as vigesimal, are really mixed scales, with 20 as their primary base. The Canaque scale differs from the Nahuatl only in forming a compound word for 15, instead of introducing a new and simple term.

In the examples which follow, it is not thought best to extend the lists of numerals beyond 10, except in special instances where the illustration of some particular point may demand it. The usual quinary scale will be found, with a few exceptions like those just instanced, to have the following structure or one similar to it in all essential details: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 5-1, 5-2, 5-3, 5-4, 10, 10-1, 10-2, 10-3, 10-4, 10-5, 10-5-1, 10-5-2, 10-5-3, 10-5-4, 20. From these forms the entire system can readily be constructed as soon as it is known whether its principal base is to be 10 or 20.

Turning first to the native African languages, I have selected the following quinary scales from the abundant material that has been collected by the various explorers of the “Dark Continent.” In some cases the numerals of certain tribes, as given by one writer, are found to differ widely from the same numerals as reported by another. No attempt has been made at comparison of these varying forms of orthography, which are usually to be ascribed to difference of nationality on the part of the collectors.

Feloops.246
1.enory.
2.sickaba, or cookaba.
3.sisajee.
4.sibakeer.
5.footuck.
6.footuck-enory= 5-1.
7.footuck-cookaba= 5-2.
8.footuck-sisajee= 5-3.
9.footuck-sibakeer= 5-4.
10.sibankonyen.
Kissi.247
1.pili.
2.miu.
3.nga.
4.iol.
5.nguenu.
6.ngom-pum= 5-1.
7.ngom-miu= 5-2.
8.ngommag= 5-3.
9.nguenu-iol= 5-4.
10.to.
Ashantee.248
1.tah.
2.noo.
3.sah.
4.nah.
5.taw.
6.torata= 5 + 1.
7.toorifeenoo= 5 + 2.
8.toorifeessa= 5 + 3.
9.toorifeena= 5 + 4.
10.nopnoo.
Basa.249
1.do.
2.so.
3.ta.
4.hinye.
5.hum.
6.hum-le-do= 5 + 1.
7.hum-le-so= 5 + 2.
8.hum-le-ta= 5 + 3.
9.hum-le-hinyo= 5 + 4.
10.bla-bue.
Jallonkas.250
1.kidding.
2.fidding.
3.sarra.
4.nani.
5.soolo.
6.seni.
7.soolo ma fidding= 5 + 2.
8.soolo ma sarra= 5 + 3.
9.soolo ma nani= 5 + 4.
10.nuff.
Kru.
1.da-do.
2.de-son.
3.de-tan.
4.de-nie.
5.de-mu.
6.dme-du= 5-1.
7.ne-son= [5] + 2.
8.ne-tan= [5] + 3.
9.sepadu= 10 − 1?
10.pua.
Jaloffs.251
1.wean.
2.yar.
3.yat.
4.yanet.
5.judom.
6.judom-wean= 5-1.
7.judom-yar= 5-2.
8.judom-yat= 5-3.
9.judom yanet= 5-4.
10.fook.
Golo.252
1.mbali.
2.bisi.
3.bitta.
4.banda.
5.zonno.
6.tsimmi tongbali= 5 + 1.
7.tsimmi tobisi= 5 + 2.
8.tsimmi tobitta= 5 + 3.
9.tsimmi to banda= 5 + 4.
10.nifo.
Foulah.253
1.go.
2.deeddee.
3.tettee.
4.nee.
5.jouee.
6.jego= 5-1.
7.jedeeddee= 5-2.
8.je-tettee= 5-3.
9.je-nee= 5-4.
10.sappo.
Soussou.254
1.keren.
2.firing.
3.sarkan.
4.nani.
5.souli.
6.seni.
7.solo-fere= 5-2.
8.solo-mazarkan= 5 + 3.
9.solo-manani= 5 + 4.
10.fu.
Bullom.255
1.bul.
2.tin.
3.ra.
4.hyul.
5.men.
6.men-bul= 5-1.
7.men-tin= 5-2.
8.men-ra= 5-3.
9.men-hyul= 5-4.
10.won.
Vei.256
1.dondo.
2.fera.
3.sagba.
4.nani.
5.soru.
6.sun-dondo= 5-1.
7.sum-fera= 5-2.
8.sun-sagba= 5-3.
9.sun-nani= 5-4.
10.tan.
Dinka.257
1.tok.
2.rou.
3.dyak.
4.nuan.
5.wdyets.
6.wdetem= 5-1.
7.wderou= 5-2.
8.bet, bed= 5-3.
9.wdenuan= 5-4.
10.wtyer= 5 × 2.
Temne.
1.in.
2.ran.
3.sas.
4.anle.
5.tr-amat.
6.tr-amat rok-in= 5 + 1.
7.tr-amat de ran= 5 + 2.
8.tr-amat re sas= 5 + 3.
9.tr-amat ro n-anle= 5 + 4.
10.tr-ofatr.
Abaker.258
1.kili.
2.bore.
3.dotla.
4.ashe.
5.ini.
6.im kili= 5-1.
7.im-bone= 5-2.
8.ini-dotta= 5-3.
9.tin ashe= 5-4.
10.chica.
Bagrimma.259
1.kede.
2.sab.
3.muta.
4.so.
5.mi.
6.mi-ga= 5 + 1.
7.tsidi.
8.marta= 5 + 23.
9.do-so= [5] + 34
10.duk-keme.
Papaa.260
1.depoo.
2.auwi.
3.ottong.
4.enne.
5.attong.
6.attugo.
7.atjuwe= [5] + 2.
8.attiatong= [5] + 3.
9.atjeenne= [5] + 4.
10.awo.
Efik.261
1.kiet.
2.iba.
3.ita.
4.inan.
5.itiun.
6.itio-kiet= 5-1.
7.itia-ba= 5-2.
8.itia-eta= 5-3.
9.osu-kiet= 10 − 1?
10.duup.
Nupe.262
1.nini.
2.gu-ba.
3.gu-ta.
4.gu-ni.
5.gu-tsun.
6.gu-sua-yin= 5 + 1.
7.gu-tua-ba= 5 + 2.
8.gu-tu-ta= 5 + 3.
9.gu-tua-ni= 5 + 4.
10.gu-wo.
Mokko.263
1.kiä.
2.iba.
3.itta.
4.inan.
5.üttin.
6.itjüekee= 5 + 1.
7.ittiaba= 5 + 2.
8.itteiata= 5 + 3.
9.huschukiet.
10.büb.
Kanuri.264
1.tilo.
2.ndi.
3.yasge.
4.dege.
5.ugu.
6.arasge= 5 + 1.
7.tulur.
8.wusge= 5 + 3.
9.legar.
10.megu= 2 × 5.
Binin.265
1.bo.
2.be.
3.la.
4.nin.
5.tang.
6.tahu= 5 + 1?
7.tabi= 5 + 2.
8.tara= 5 + 3.
9.ianin (tanin?)= 5 + 4?
10.te.
Kredy.266
1.baia.
2.rommu.
3.totto.
4.sosso.
5.saya.
6.yembobaia= [5] + 1.
7.yemborommu= [5] + 2.
8.yembototto= [5] + 3.
9.yembososso= [5] + 4.
10.puh.
Herero.267
1.mue.
2.vari.
3.tatu.
4.ne.
5.tano.
6.hambou-mue= [5] + 1.
7.hambou-vari= [5] + 2.
8.hambou-tatu= [5] + 3.
9.hambou-ne= [5] + 4.
10.
Ki-Yau.268
1.jumo.
2.wawiri.
3.watatu.
4.mcheche.
5.msano.
6.musano na jumo= 5 + 1.
7.musano na wiri= 5 + 2.
8.musano na watatu= 5 + 3.
9.musano na mcheche= 5 + 4.
10.ikumi.
Fernando Po.269
1.muli.
2.mempa.
3.meta.
4.miene.
5.mimito.
6.mimito na muli= 5 + 1.
7.mimito na mempa= 5 + 2.
8.mimito na meta= 5 + 3.
9.mimito na miene= 5 + 4.
10.miemieu= 5-5?
Ki-Nyassa
1.kimodzi.
2.vi-wiri.
3.vi-tatu.
4.vinye.
5.visano.
6.visano na kimodzi= 5 + 1.
7.visano na vi-wiri= 5 + 2.
8.visano na vitatu= 5 + 3.
9.visano na vinye= 5 + 4.
10.chikumi.
Balengue.270
1.guevoho.
2.ibare.
3.raro.
4.inaï.
5.itano.
6.itano na guevoho= 5 + 1.
7.itano na ibare= 5 + 2.
8.itano na raro= 5 + 3.
9.itano na inaï= 5 + 4.
10.ndioum, or nai-hinaï.
Kunama.271
1.ella.
2.bare.
3.sadde.
4.salle.
5.kussume.
6.kon-t'-ella= hand 1.
7.kon-te-bare= hand 2.
8.kon-te-sadde= hand 3.
9.kon-te-salle= hand 4.
10.kol-lakada.
Gola.272
1.ngoumou.
2.ntie.
3.ntaï.
4.tina.
5.nonon.
6.diegoum= [5] + 1.
7.dientie= [5] + 2.
8.dietai= [5] + 3.
9.dectina= [5] + 4.
10.esia.
Barea.273
1.doko
2.arega.
3.sane.
4.sone.
5.oita.
6.data.
7.dz-ariga= 5 + 2.
8.dis-sena= 5 + 3.
9.lefete-mada= without 10.
10.lefek.
Matibani.274
1.mosa.
2.pili.
3.taru.
4.teje.
5.taru.
6.tana mosa= 5-1.
7.tana pili= 5-2.
8.tana taru= 5-3.
9.loco.
10.loco nakege.
Bonzé.275
1.tan.
2.vele.
3.daba.
4.nani.
5.lolou.
6.maïda= [5] + 1.
7.maïfile= [5] + 2.
8.maïshaba= [5] + 3.
9.maïnan= [5] + 4.
10.bou.
Mpovi
1.moueta.
2.bevali.
3.betata.
4.benaï.
5.betani.
6.betani moueta= 5-1.
7.betani bevali= 5-2.
8.betani betata= 5-3.
9.betani benai= 5-4.
10.nchinia.
Triton's Bay, New Quinea.276
1.samosi.
2.roueti.
3.tourou.
4.faat.
5.rimi.
6.rim-samosi= 5-1.
7.rim-roueti= 5-2.
8.rim-tourou= 5-3.
9.rim-faat= 5-4.
10.outsia.
Ende, or Flores.277
1.sa.
2.zua.
3.telu.
4.wutu.
5.lima= hand.
6.lima-sa= 5-1, or hand 1.
7.lima-zua= 5-2.
8.rua-butu= 2 × 4?
9.trasa= [10] − 1?
10.sabulu.
Mallicolo.278
1.tseekaee.
2.ery.
3.erei.
4.ebats.
5.ereem.
6.tsookaee= [5] + 1.
7.gooy= [5] + 2.
8.hoorey= [5] + 3.
9.goodbats= [5] + 4.
10.senearn.
Ebon, Marshall Islands.279
1.iuwun.
2.drud.
3.chilu.
4.emer.
5.lailem.
6.chilchinu= 5 + 1.
7.chilchime= 5 + 2.
8.twalithuk= [10] − 2.
9.twahmejuwou= [10] − 1.
10.iungou.
Uea, Loyalty Island.280
1.tahi.
2.lua.
3.tolu.
4.fa.
5.lima.
6.tahi.
7.lua.
8.tolu.
9.fa.
10.lima.
Uea.280—[another dialect.]
1.hacha.
2.lo.
3.kuun.
4.thack.
5.thabumb.
6.lo-acha= 2d 1.
7.lo-alo= 2d 2.
8.lo-kuun= 2d 3.
9.lo-thack= 2d 4.
10.lebenetee.
Isle of Pines.281
1.ta.
2.bo.
3.beti.
4.beu.
5.ta-hue.
6.no-ta= 2d 1.
7.no-bo= 2d 2.
8.no-beti= 2d 3.
9.no-beu= 2d 4.
10.de-kau.
Ureparapara, Banks Islands.282
1.vo towa.
2.vo ro.
3.vo tol.
4.vo vet.
5.teveliem= 1 hand.
6.leve jea= other 1.
7.leve ro= other 2.
8.leve tol= other 3.
9.leve vet= other 4.
10.sanowul= 2 sets.
Mota, Banks Islands.282
1.tuwale.
2.nirua.
3.nitol.
4.nivat.
5.tavelima= 1 hand.
6.laveatea= other 1.
7.lavearua= other 2.
8.laveatol= other 3.
9.laveavat= other 4.
10.sanavul= 2 sets.
New Caledonia.283
1.parai.
2.paroo.
3.parghen.
4.parbai.
5.panim.
6.panim-gha= 5-1.
7.panim-roo= 5-2.
8.panim-ghen= 5-3.
9.panim-bai= 5-4.
10.parooneek.
Yengen, New Cal.284
1.hets.
2.heluk.
3.heyen.
4.pobits.
5.nim= hand.
6.nim-wet= 5-1.
7.nim-weluk= 5-2.
8.nim-weyen= 5-3.
9.nim-pobit= 5-4.
10.pain-duk.
Aneiteum.285
1.ethi.
2.ero.
3.eseik.
4.manohwan.
5.nikman.
6.nikman cled et ethi= 5 + 1.
7.nikman cled et oro= 5 + 2.
8.nikman cled et eseik= 5 + 3.
9.nikman cled et manohwan= 5 + 4.
10.nikman lep ikman= 5 + 5.
Tanna
1.riti.
2.karu.
3.kahar.
4.kefa.
5.krirum.
6.krirum riti= 5-1.
7.krirum karu= 5-2.
8.krirum kahar?= 5-3.
9.krirum kefa?= 5-4.
10.——
Eromanga
1.sai.
2.duru.
3.disil.
4.divat.
5.siklim= 1 hand.
6.misikai= other 1?
7.siklim naru= 5-2.
8.siklim disil= 5-3.
9.siklim mindivat= 5 + 4.
10.narolim= 2 hands.
Fate, New Heb.286
1.iskei.
2.rua.
3.tolu.
4.bate.
5.lima= hand.
6.la tesa= other 1.
7.la rua= other 2.
8.la tolu= other 3.
9.la fiti= other 4.
10.relima= 2 hands.
Api, New Heb.
1.tai.
2.lua.
3.tolu.
4.vari.
5.lima= hand.
6.o rai= other 1.
7.o lua= other 2.
8.o tolo= other 3.
9.o vari= other 4.
10.lua lima= 2 hands.
Sesake, New Heb.
1.sikai.
2.dua.
3.dolu.
4.pati.
5.lima= hand.
6.la tesa= other 1.
7.la dua= other 2.
8.la dolu= other 3.
9.lo veti= other 4.
10.dua lima= 2 hands.
Pama, New Heb.
1.tai.
2.e lua.
3.e tolu.
4.e hati.
5.e lime= hand.
6.a hitai= other 1.
7.o lu= other 2.
8.o tolu= other 3.
9.o hati= other 4.
10.ha lua lim= 2 hands
Aurora, New Heb.
1.tewa.
2.i rua.
3.i tol.
4.i vat.
5.tavalima= 1 hand.
6.lava tea= other 1.
7.lava rua= other 2.
8.lava tol= other 3.
9.la vat= other 4.
10.sanwulu= two sets.
Tobi.287
1.yat.
2.glu.
3.ya.
4.uan.
5.yanim= 1 hand.
6.yawor= other 1.
7.yavic= other 2.
8.yawa= other 3.
9.yatu= other 4.
10.yasec.
Palm Island.288
1.yonkol.
2.yakka.
3.tetjora.
4.tarko.
5.yonkol mala= 1 hand.
Jajowerong, Victoria.288
1.kiarp.
2.bulaits.
3.bulaits kiarp= 2-1.
4.bulaits bulaits= 2-2.
5.kiarp munnar= 1 hand.
6.bulaits bulaits bulaits= 2-2-2.
10.bulaits munnar= 2 hands.