NumType: numeral type
In Turkish numbers can be cardinal, ordinal or distributive. We also mark the interrogative kaç “how many” as a number, which inflects the same way the numbers are inflected and can become ordinal or distributive.
Card: cardinal number or corresponding interrogative
Examples
- 1, 2, 3
- bir, iki, üç “one, two, three”
- kaç kitap okudun “how many books did your read”
Ord: ordinal number or corresponding interrogative
In some languages, this is a subtype of adjective or adverb.
In Turkish, we mark the ordinal numerals as NUM.
Ordinal numerals are formed by the suffix -IncI. A period following a numeral may also indicate ordinal use of the number.
Examples
- 1., 2., 3.
- birinci, ikinci, üçüncü “first, second, third”
- kaçıncı kitabı okudun “which (of a series) book did your read” (answer should be something like ikinci “(the) second”)
Dist: distributive numeral
Used to express that the same quantity is distributed to each member in a set of targets.
Distributive numerals are formed by the suffix -(ş)Ar.
Examples
- birer, ikişer, üçer “one each, two each, three each”
- kaçar kitap okudunuz “how many books have you each read”
Treebank Statistics (UD_Turkish)
This feature is universal.
It occurs with 3 different values: Card, Dist, Ord.
2050 tokens (4%) have a non-empty value of NumType.
278 types (2%) occur at least once with a non-empty value of NumType.
195 lemmas (3%) occur at least once with a non-empty value of NumType.
The feature is used with 1 part-of-speech tags: tr-pos/NUM (2050; 4% instances).
NUM
2050 tr-pos/NUM tokens (100% of all NUM tokens) have a non-empty value of NumType.
The most frequent other feature values with which NUM and NumType co-occurred: Case=EMPTY (1730; 84%), Person=EMPTY (1730; 84%), Number=EMPTY (1730; 84%).
NUM tokens may have the following values of NumType:
Card(2006; 98% of non-emptyNumType): bir, iki, bin, üç, on, dört, beş, yüzde, altı, milyonDist(12; 1% of non-emptyNumType): birer, ikişer, otuzbeşer, yirmisekizerOrd(32; 2% of non-emptyNumType): birincisi, onyedi., ikincisi, İkincisi, birinci, doksandokuz., dokuz., oniki., onikinci., onsekiz.
| Paradigm bir | Card | Dist |
|---|---|---|
| _ | bir, ,bir | birer |
| Case=Acc|Number=Sing|Number[psor]=Sing|Person=3|Person[psor]=3 | birini | |
| Case=Acc|Number=Sing|Person=3 | biri | |
| Case=Dat|Number=Sing|Number[psor]=Sing|Person=3|Person[psor]=2 | birine | |
| Case=Dat|Number=Sing|Number[psor]=Sing|Person=3|Person[psor]=3 | birine | |
| Case=Loc|Number=Sing|Number[psor]=Sing|Person=3|Person[psor]=3 | birinde | |
| Case=Nom|Number=Sing|Number[psor]=Sing|Person=3|Person[psor]=3 | biri | |
| Case=Nom|Number=Sing|Person=3 | bir |
NumType seems to be lexical feature of NUM. 95% lemmas (185) occur only with one value of NumType.
Relations with Agreement in NumType
The 10 most frequent relations where parent and child node agree in NumType:
NUM –[compound]–> NUM (156; 99%),
NUM –[conj]–> NUM (22; 96%),
NUM –[nummod]–> NUM (1; 100%).
NumType in other languages: [bg] [cs] [de] [el] [en] [es] [eu] [fa] [fi] [fr] [ga] [he] [hu] [it] [ja] [ko] [sv] [u]