This appendix features a number of Nāmaς' numerals, as well as their grammatical functions and inflection. The language is generally rather inflected, thus including the numerals. In fact, Nāmaς congruates a higher number of numbers, than it's older predecessors; Latin, Ancient Greek and Sanskrit.
These numbers describe a quantity of the object, as well as serving as the independent, nominal form of the numerals. All numbers decline like normal adjectives, as the neuter gender. Numbers 1 - 5, however, decline according to all genders.
Mfor the Masculine gender
F for the Feminine gender
N for the Neuter gender
In Naṃkrthāvāka linguistics, the numbers are often distinguished; between the Main numbers, which are simpler, non-compositions...
Main numbers
Number
Cardinal
Ordinal
Partitive
Multiple
M
F
N
M
F
N
M
F
N
M
F
N
1
ēka
ēna
eı
2
dva
dı
dıa
3
trā
trī
traı
4
kātu
kātı
kātaı
5
pānȷa
pānȷı
pānȷa
Number
Cardinal
Ordinal
Partitive
Multiple
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
101
110
120
130
1,000
1,100
1,000,000
...And the secondary numbers, which essentially are larger compounds, with suffixes to modify the usage.