| Numbers |
| Here are the basic numbers
from one to ten: |
|||||
| kenne | "one" | pácchitak | "six" | ||
| "two" | seeloowih |
"seven" | |||
| teleeka | "three" | "eight" | |||
| huya | "four" | kénnekotoh | "nine" | ||
| kenekkuh | "five" | kicchih | "ten" | ||
| You say the numbers from 11 to 19 by adding wallik "increased" to the basic number, very much like "teen" in English. | |||||
| kenne wallik | 11 | pácchitak wallik | 16 | ||
| 12 | seeloowih wallik |
17 | |||
| teleeka wallik | 13 | 18 | |||
| huya wallik | 14 | 19 | |||
| 15 | |||||
| The numbers for multiples of ten add kicchih "ten" to the basic number, very much like "–ty" in English "forty" and "fifty." | |||||
| 20 | pácchitak kiccih | 60 | |||
| teleeka kicchih | 30 | seeloowih kiccih |
70 | ||
| huya kiccih | 40 | 80 | |||
| kenekkuh kiccih | 50 | kénnekotoh kiccih | 90 | ||
| For numbers between multiples of ten, such as "twenty one," you add the single-digit number after kicchih "ten." | |||||
| 21 — "two tens one" | ||
| 22 — "two tens two" | ||
| 23 — "two tens three" | ||
| 24 — "two tens four" | ||
| 25 — "two tens five" | ||
| The word for "hundred" — siyento — is borrowed from Spanish ciento "hundred." | ||
| siyento | 100 | |
| kenne siyento kenne | 101 — "one hundred one" | |
| kenne siyento |
102 — "one hundred two" | |
| kenne siyento huya | 104 — "one hundred four" | |
| kenne siyento kénnekotoh | 109 — "one hundred nine" | |
| kenne siyento kenne wallik | 110 — "one hundred one increased" | |
| 111 — "one hundred one increased one" | ||
| kenne siyento kenne wallik
|
112 — "one hundred one increased two" | |
| kenne siyento
|
120 — "one hundred two increased" | |
| kenne siyento |
121 — "one hundred two increased one" | |
| kenne siyento huya wallik | 140 — "one hundred four increased" | |
| kenne siyento huya wallik huya | 144 — "one hundred four increased four" | |
| 200 — "two hundred" | ||
| teleeka siyento |
320 — "three hundred two tens" | |
| 434— "four hundred three tens four" | ||
| pácchitak siyento kénnekotoh | 609 — "six hundred eight" | |
| 840 — "eight hundred four tens" | ||
| 847 — "nine hundred four increased seven" |
| There's a very good chance that the Coast Miwok word for "thousand" would have been borrowed from Spanish mil "thousand," so it probably would have been mil — but we don't know this for sure. | ||
| 2000 | ||
| 2004 | ||