Expert Voices

'Anumeric' People: When Languages Have No Words for Numbers

Cultures without numbers, or with only one or two precise numbers, include the Piraha (shown here), who live along the sinuous banks of the black Maici River in Amazonia.
Cultures without numbers, or with only one or two precise numbers, include the Piraha (shown here), who live along the sinuous banks of the black Maici River in Amazonia.
(Image credit: Mídia NINJA/Flickr)

This article was originally published at The Conversation. The publication contributed the article to Live Science's Expert Voices: Op-Ed & Insights.

Numbers do not exist in all cultures. There are numberless hunter-gatherers embedded deep in Amazonia, living along branches of the world's largest river tree. Instead of using words for precise quantities, these people rely exclusively on terms analogous to "a few" or "some."

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