ᴱQ. tuksa num. card. “gross, 144; hundred” (Category: Large Cardinal Number)
In the Qenya Lexicon of the 1910s, ᴱQ. tuksa was the number “144” [twelve twelves], also translated as a “gross” and based the early root ᴱ√TUKU² (QL/95), apparently part of a duodecimal counting system. In this document, the word for “hundred” was ᴱQ. tuksa pínea [little hundred] or tuksa lempea [decimal hundred]. In the Early Qenya Grammar (EQG) of the 1920s, however, tuksa simply meant “hundred” without any reference to duodecimals (PE14/49, 83).
Neo-Quenya: For purposes of Neo-Quenya, I use ᴺQ. tuxa for “hundred” since there are no other clear alternatives.
References ✧ PE14/49, 83; PME/95; QL/95
Glosses
Variations
Related
Inflections
| tukse | plural; adj-agreement | ✧ PE14/83 |
| tukse | plural | ✧ PE14/83 |
Element In
Derivations
Phonetic Developments
| ᴱ√TUKSA > tuksa | [tuksā] > [tuksa] | ✧ QL/95 |
ᴱQ. tuksa pínea n. “hundred” (Category: Large Cardinal Number)
References ✧ QL/95
Glosses
Variations
Elements
| tuksa | “gross, 144; hundred” | ✧ QL/95 | |
| pínea | “small” | ✧ QL/95 (pīnea) | |
| lempea¹ | “decimal” | ✧ QL/95 | |