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Personal Pronouns & Numbers
Let's look at our first Amharic words: personal pronouns & the numbers 1-1,000,000.
አንተ, አንቺ, እርስዎ or እናንተ?
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አንተ is used for singular, masculine subjects, for example if talking to your brother.
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አንቺ is used for singular, feminine subjects, for example if talking to your sister.
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እርስዎ is used for singular subjects when being polite. For example, if talking to your boss, you wouldn't use አንተ/አንቺ, rather you'd use እርስዎ - using አንተ/አንቺ could - and most likely would - be considered rude. The general rule for using እርስዎ is if the person is older than you, in a higher position than you (a teacher, for example), or not known (someone on the street).
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እናንተ is used for plural subjects, whether the situation requires politeness or not. So you'd use እናንተ if you were talking either to your brother and sister (impolite situation) or two of your teachers (polite situation).
እሱ, እሷ, እሳቸው, or እነሱ?
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እሱ is used for singular, masculine subjects, for example if talking about your brother.
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እሷ is used for singular, feminine subjects, for example if talking about your sister.
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እሳቸው is a pronoun in Amharic which doesn't exist in many other languages. It is a polite form for ‘He/She’, which is used in the same situations as you'd use እርስዎ, except that እሳቸው is used to talk about someone, not to them. So for example, when talking about your boss, you would refer to them as እሳቸው and not እሱ/እሷ. Note that it is used for both ‘He’ and ‘She’.
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እነሱ, the same as እናንተ, is used for plural subjects, whether being polite or not. So you'd use እነሱ if you were talking either about your brother and sister (impolite situation) or about two of your teachers (polite situation).
As well as እሱ, እሷ, እሳቸው and እነሱ, you may also come across እርሱ, እርሷ, እርሳቸው, and እነርሱ, which are simply another form of ‘He’, ‘She’, ‘He/She’ (polite) and ‘They’. These forms are used more in written Amharic than in spoken Amharic.
Here is some practice. Below are the pronouns in Amharic - try and remember what they are in English.
እሱ
He
እርስዎ
You (frm)
እናንተ
You (pl.)
እኔ
I
እኛ
We
እሳቸው
He/She (frm)
You (f)
አንቺ
እሷ
She
እነሱ
They
አንተ
You (m)
We can now look at the numbers in Amharic:
You will see that it's very easy to form the numbers between the tens - you just say the ten and then the unit, for example 29 is ሃያ ዘጠኝ. For the number 1,000 you may also see ሺ.
To form the ordinal numbers (like ‘First’, ‘Second’, and ‘Third’) you simply add -ኧኛ -äñña to the number if it ends in a consonant (the letter ኧ makes the ‘ä’ sound, but is very rarely used in Amharic), and -ኛ -ñña if it ends in a vowel, for example:
The only exception to the rule is ‘Ninth’, which becomes ዘጠነኛ.
The word for ‘Point’, for example ‘3.5’, is ነጥብ.
To say ‘Percent’, you place በመቶ after the number. For example, ‘1%’ is አንድ በመቶ.
Now it's time for some practice. Below are some numbers written in Amharic, and some written in digits. Try to work out the English translation of the Amharic numbers, and the Amharic translation of the digits!
አምስት መቶ ስልሳ ሰባት
537
ሰላሳ ዘጠኝ
39
372
ሦስት መቶ ሰባ ሁለት
99%
ዘጠና ዘጠኝ በመቶ
አምሳ ስድስት በመቶ
56%
ሁለት ሺህ አስራ አራት
2014
48,691
አርባ ስምንት ሺህ ስድስት መቶ ዘጠና አንድ
መቶ ሃያ ሦስተኛ
123rd
85th
ሰማንያ አምስተኛ
5,310
አምስት ሺህ ሦስት መቶ አስር
22.44
ሃያ ሁለት ነጥብ አርባ አራት
7.9
ሰባት ነጥብ ዘጠኝ
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