I’m not sure. {ngIq} has been used in sentences with numbers, but not in the way you want (if I understand what you’re trying to say). E.g. ngIq tonSaw' lo' SaD law' San chenmoH qeylIS wej boghbogh nuvpu' San chenmoH In one single move, Kahless decided the fate of thousands, and those to come. PB ngIq raQ – 200 QaS, mon – 200 QaS loS raQmey je Outposts cost 200 each; capitals, 200 each plus 4 outposts. MKE ngIq gholvaD vaghmaH QaS yInob Pay each player 50 forces. MKE ngIq gholvo' wa'maH QaS yItlhap Collect 10 forces from every player. MKE Since {mIw} means “procedure, process; step, stage (in a process)” – sequential by nature – why not just say {loS mIw luSIQlu'}? Note there’s also a separate verb {quq} meaning “happen simultaneously”: quqtaHvIS wanI'vam raQDaq pawta' qotar qempa'QeH je At the same time Kotar and the *Qempa'keh* arrive at the camp. PB And don’t forget the adverbials {nIteb} "alone, acting alone, on one’s own, etc." vs. {nItebHa'} "linked, (acting) united, side-by-side, etc.”. --Voragh From: mayqel qunenoS I was wondering whether we could say: {loS ngIq mIw luSIQlu'} four individual processes someone endured Meaning "four individual processes one after the other". What puzzles me is using a number in conjuction with {ngIq}. Could this be done ? Is the above sentence correct ? ~ nI'ghma