Fantastic stuff from Michael Kaplan today, he did me a favor and dissected the Ethiopic numbering system. He points us to two good sites on Ethiopic Numerals. One at Geez.org and one at the venerable AbyssiniaCyberGateway.
You can test your browser's support for the Fidel here. Personally, I use the GF Zemen Unicode font (TrueType) as it appears to be the most complete with 608 glyphs.
For example, the number 2345 is represented by 2,345 = (20 + 3)*100^1 + (40 + 5)*100^0 = 20 3 100 40 5 = TWENTY THREE HUNDRED FORTY FIVE = 1373 136b 137b 1375 136d = ፳፫፻፵፭
For example, the number 2345 is represented by
2,345 = (20 + 3)*100^1 + (40 + 5)*100^0 = 20 3 100 40 5 = TWENTY THREE HUNDRED FORTY FIVE = 1373 136b 137b 1375 136d = ፳፫፻፵፭
There's a lot of rich Ethiopian culture in the states. There are more Ethiopians in Washington D.C. than anywhere else outside of Addis Ababa. The NW, where I live, experienced an influx of Ethiopians and Eritreans during the 80s. There are many thousands in both Portland and Seattle.
I'd posted previously touting Word's support for Amharic. I went to junior college with a number of Ethiopians and picked up a colloquial chunk of Ethiopian Amharic, the language of the Amhara people. It's a fantasticly interesting language to learn. Here's a few interesting bits.
Wow, that was a lot of info that just came pouring out. Well, I've got more in my head so if you ever want to hear about it, come find me.
- ሰካት (s'ka't ~ Scott)
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