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Appendix:English numerals

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

This appendix discusses numbers or numerals in English generally. "Numerals" is also a grammatical part of speech, but only applies to certain types of numbers. (See#Parts of speech.)

Naming rules (short scale)

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English generally uses a decimal counting system for natural numbers. The names of the cardinal and ordinal numbers can be constructed from the below tables and a set of combining rules.

Each of the numbers specifically listed has a literal name that can be used on its own.

  • To name numbers 21 through 99 that are not multiples of 10, a multiple of ten is followed by a single digit number 1-9, and the value is the sum. For example, "42" is "forty-two", which places a numeral "4" before a numeral "2" to indicate that the 4 represents "forty", or 4 times 10. "Zero" never combines with other numbers in the naming system; it is only pronounced in the name for 0.
  • To name numbers 101 through 999 that are not multiples of 100, the name of a digit 1-9 is followed by "hundred" (the individual values are multiplied together) to express the first digit, then the word "and", and the rules for smaller numbers are used for the remainder (the values of the hundreds part and the remainder are summed). For example, "101" is "one hundred and one", "642" is "six hundred and forty two", and "919" is "nine hundred and nineteen".
  • For larger numbers, each additional numeral at the beginning of the string generally represents another power of ten. Every additional (up to) three digits are grouped using the rules for numbers 1-999, then paired with a multiplier.
So with the multiplier "thousand" for example: 2,001 is "two thousand one" and 1,234 is "one thousand two hundred and thirty four".
One informal variant omits the use of the word thousand, for example "fifteen hundred" instead of "one thousand five hundred". This variant tends to be used only in cases where it results in shorter pronunciation.
When writing in numerals, to aid comprehension these groups of three digits are typically separated—for example, with a comma in countries where thedecimal mark is the period. (To be manipulated by machine, these separators are usually omitted. Lists/columns and tables of numbers may use spatial alignment in addition to or instead of commas.)
Similarly, when writing numbers with words, these groups are written using the rules for 1-999 followed by the multiplier. (Any group that is "000" is neither written in words nor pronounced.) Due to the impractical length, it is uncommon to find numbers with more than a few non-zero digits in words; more often they are simply written usingArabic numerals. Examples:
375,000 has each numeral at the place in the string of numerals that represents its power of ten. Written fully in words ("three-hundred and seventy-five thousand"), the group "three-hundredandseventy-five" modifies the word "thousand".
Compare 3,750, for which each word representing a numeral is immediately modified by a word representing its power of ten: "three-thousand", "seven-hundred", "and" "fifty".
954,020,672: "nine hundred and fifty four million twenty thousand six hundred and seventy two" (uncommonly seen due to length)
20,000,000: "twenty million" (commonly seen due to brevity)

Ordinal numbers

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When constructing names for ordinal numbers, the ordinal variant given in the charts below is only used for the final word. For example:

  • first
  • second
  • third
  • fourth
  • twentieth
  • twenty-first (not twentieth first)

Ordinal numbers can also be written with Arabic numerals, in which case the last two letters of what would be the final word in the written-out form are appended to the numerals. For example:

  • 1st
  • 2nd
  • 3rd
  • 4th
  • 20th
  • 21st

Systematic variations

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The words for numbers less than one hundred are varied as follows: Those not expressible by a single word can when written be joined by a hyphen, as in "six hundred forty-two". In British English, the word "and" is typically inserted before them. (Some speakers of North American English also insert "and", especially when the number is below 20.) Examples:

  • six hundred and two (instead of "six hundred two")
  • six hundred and forty-two
  • two thousand and one
  • one thousand two hundred and thirty-four
  • one million and one
  • six hundred and twenty-two million one thousand and five

As shown on the charts below, there are two systems for the names of multipliers, known as the "long system" and "short system", though the short system is generally now preferred in English, to avoid confusion.

In countries where the comma or middle dot is used as the decimal mark, spaces or periods are used for thousands separators. Some style guides prefer no digits separator for four-digit numbers (1000-9999).

In less formal speech, the names for the numbers 11-99 (except multiples of ten) can be combined with "hundred" as an alternative to a longer systematic name using both "thousand" and "hundred". For example "eleven hundred" can replace "one thousand one hundred" but "twenty hundred and two" never replaces "two thousand and two" except poetically.

For large round numbers, familiar multipliers are sometimes repeated instead of using less familiar multipliers. For example, "one billion billion" instead of "one quintillion".

In British English, the phrases "thousand million", "thousand billion", and "thousand trillion" are sometimes used in place of "billion", "trillion", and "quadrillion", respectively.

The determinersa orthe can grammatically substitute for "one", as in "a hundred" or "the first thousand"; and "acouple" can be used to mean two (though to some speakers "a couple" means "a few" which could perhaps range from two to five or higher).

The names of non-counting numbers — like in a code or a sequence or a naming scheme as for years or addresses — typically use a form of the "hundreds replace thousands" variation that also drops the "hundreds". Years and addresses are never written with commas as digit separators. For example, the year 1,984 is pronounced "nineteen eighty four"; referring to that year with the systematic reading "nineteen hundred and eighty four" sounds old-fashioned. Sequence numbers with zero digits have additional variations. More commonly than not, a zero in only the tens place is read as "oh" (as in the lettero), like "nineteen oh four". A zero in the hundreds place triggers use of the systematic name or the "hundreds replacement" variant. Examples:

  • 2,001: "two thousand and one" or rarely "twenty oh one"
  • 2,015: "two thousand and fifteen" or very commonly "twenty fifteen"

One complete variation for such non-counting numbers is to read individual digits. Informally, "oh" can once again substitute for zero in this scheme. For example, "1024" could be read "one zero two four" or "one oh two four".

Small whole numbers

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Single digits

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Cardinal numberOrdinal numberAbbreviation of ordinal number
0zerozeroth0th
1onefirst1st
2twosecond2nd
3threethird3rd
4fourfourth4th
5fivefifth5th
6sixsixth6th
7sevenseventh7th
8eighteighth8th
9nineninth9th

Irregular numbers: 10-19

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Cardinal numberOrdinal numberAbbreviation of ordinal number
10tententh10th
11eleveneleventh11th
12twelvetwelfth12th
13thirteenthirteenth13th
14fourteenfourteenth14th
15fifteenfifteenth15th
16sixteensixteenth16th
17seventeenseventeenth17th
18eighteeneighteenth18th
19nineteennineteenth19th

Multiples of ten

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Cardinal numberOrdinal numberAbbreviation of ordinal number
20twentytwentieth20th
30thirtythirtieth30th
40fortyfortieth40th
50fiftyfiftieth50th
60sixtysixtieth60th
70seventyseventieth70th
80eightyeightieth80th
90ninetyninetieth90th

Fractions

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EnglishWikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia

Common fractions

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Common fractions are indicated by using the cardinal form for thenumerator and the ordinal form for thedenominator, with a few exceptions for small numbers. Fractions are typically but not always normalized to proper fractions or integers with proper fraction components.

NumberRegular formIrregular form
1/1(none; one first is incorrect and would be interpreted as an ordinal)one whole
1/2(none; one second is incorrect and would be interpreted as a measure of time, 1/60th of a minute)one-half
1/3one-third
2/3two-thirds
1/4one-fourthone-quarter
2/4two-fourths (but typically normalized to one half)two-quarters
1/5one-fifth
1/6one-sixth
1/7one-seventh
1/8one-eighth
1/9one-ninth
1/10one-tenth
1/11one-eleventh
1/12one-twelfth
3/4three-fourthsthree-quarters
3/5three-fifths
3/8three-eighths
4/5four-fifths
7/8seven-eighths

GPO manual states: "Print a hyphen between the elements of a fraction, but omit it between the numerator and the denominator when the hyphen appears in either or in both.

one-thousandth
two-thirds
two one-thousandths
twenty-three thirtieths
twenty-one thirty-seconds
three-fourths of an inch"[1]

Decimal fractions

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Decimal fractions are typically written as Hindu-Arabic numerals (like 0.125). When written as words, the symbols are generally translated one at a time, for example "zero point one two five". Zero ornought can also be written asoh, but this may be considered casual and is more common when being spoken.

Multiplying numbers

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Short and long scale

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Cardinal numberOrdinal numberAbbreviation of ordinal number
100hundredhundredth100th
1,000thousandthousandth1,000th
10,000ten thousandten-thousandth10,000th
100,000hundred thousandhundred-thousandth100,000th
1,000,000millionmillionth1,000,000th

For higher multiplying terms, the ordinal suffix is always "th".

NameShort scale
(modern)
Long scale
(dated)
Authorities
AHD4CODOED2OEDnewRHD2SOED3W3UM
million106106*
milliard 109
billion1091012*
billiard 1015    * *
trillion10121018*
trilliard 1021*   * *
quadrillion10151024*
quintillion10181030*
sextillion10211036*
septillion10241042*
octillion10271048*
nonillion10301054*
decillion10331060*
undecillion10361066*
duodecillion10391072*
tredecillion10421078*
quattuordecillion10451084*
quindecillion10481090*
sexdecillion10511096*
septendecillion105410102*
octodecillion105710108*
novemdecillion106010114*
vigintillion106310120*
googol1010010100*
centillion1030310600*
googolplex10101001010100

Usage notes

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  1. An asterisk (*) denotes that it has not been verified whether the term so marked is or is not mentioned in the specified work of reference.
  2. The dictionary abbreviations are as follows:
  • AHD4theAmerican Heritage Dictionary, 4th edition,→ISBN.[1].
  • CODCambridge Dictionaries Online, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
  • OED2Oxford English Dictionary, 2nd edition, Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.→ISBN (and addenda since publication in 1989).
  • OEDnewOxford English Dictionary, New Edition, Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.[2] (subscription required), checked April 2007.
  • RHD2TheRandom House Dictionary, 2nd Unabridged Edition, 1987, Random House.
  • SOED3Shorter Oxford English Dictionary, 3rd edition, 1993, Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  • W3Webster's Third New International Dictionary, Unabridged, 1993, Merriam-Webster.
  • UMHow Many? A Dictionary of Units of Measures, published by Russ Rowlett and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill,online, accessed 1 April 2007.
    milliard[1] a unit of quantity equal to 109, which is what Americans call a billion.
    billiard unit of quantity equal to 1015, which is one quadrillion in American terminology or 1000 billion in traditional British terminology. The name is coined to parallel milliard, which has long been a name for 1000 million.
    trilliard a unit of quantity equal to 1021, which is one sextillion in American terminology or 1000 trillion in traditional British terminology. The name is coined to parallel milliard, which has long been a name for 1000 million.

South Asian numbering system

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In South Asian varieties of English, the traditionalSouth Asian numbering system is commonly used instead of or alongside the short and long scale. This groups higher digits in pairs instead of triplets.

South Asian EnglishIndian figurePower notationArabic figureShort scale English
one11001one
ten1010110ten
onehundred100102100one hundred
onethousand1,0001031,000one thousand
ten thousand10,00010410,000ten thousand
onelakh (alsolac)1,00,000105100,000one hundred thousand
ten lakh10,00,0001061,000,000one million
onecrore1,00,00,00010710,000,000ten million
ten crore10,00,00,000108100,000,000one hundred million
onearab / one hundred crore1,00,00,00,0001091,000,000,000one billion
one thousand crore / ten arab10,00,00,00,000101010,000,000,000ten billion
ten thousand crore / onekharab / one hundred arab1,00,00,00,00,0001011100,000,000,000one hundred billion
one lakh crore / ten kharab / one thousand arab10,00,00,00,00,00010121,000,000,000,000one trillion
ten lakh crore / oneneel / one hundred kharab / ten thousand arab1,00,00,00,00,00,000101310,000,000,000,000ten trillion
one crore crore / ten neel10,00,00,00,00,00,0001014100,000,000,000,000one hundred trillion
onepadm / one hundred neel / ten crore crore1,00,00,00,00,00,00,00010151,000,000,000,000,000one quadrillion
ten padm / one hundred crore crore10,00,00,00,00,00,00,000101610,000,000,000,000,000ten quadrillion
oneshankh / one hundred padm / one thousand crore crore / one lakh lakh crore1,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,0001017100,000,000,000,000,000one hundred quadrillion

General rules for very large numbers (short and long scale)

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See also:Appendix:Very large numbers

Depending on whether you are using the old European system of powers of a million, or the more current system of powers of a thousand, then the name of a number can be created by extracting the name of the power from this table and then adding-illion to the end. This method should be treated with caution,[notes 1] and it is common to find slight spelling variations, normally to aid with the pronunciation of the resulting word. In most situations it is preferable to write numbers such as these usingstandard form instead of words.[2]

UnitsTensHundreds
1undecicenti
2duovigintiducenti
3tretrigintatrecenti
4quattorquadragintaquadringenti
5quinquaquinquagintaquingenti
6sexsexagintasescenti
7septeseptuagintaseptigenti
8octooctogintaoctingenti
9novemnonagintanongenti

For an example of how this might work consider10762{\displaystyle 10^{762}}. This can be written as1000254{\displaystyle 1000^{254}} using the modern system. This is then interpreted as ducenti-quinquaginta-quattor-illion using the above table. The hyphens are normally removed leavingone ducentiquinquagintaquattorillion. In the older system it would be written as1000000127{\displaystyle 1000000^{127}} and interpreted asone centivigintiseptillion, noting that the ‘e’ from ‘septe’ has been elided.

Groups and multiplying words

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Number12345
Modifiersingle /solodouble /twofoldtriple /threefoldquadruple /fourfoldquintuple / pentuple /fivefold
Wholeloner /singleton /monadpair /couple /twosome /duo /dyadtrio /threesome /triad /troikafoursome /quartet /tetradfivesome /quintet /pentad
Partonly one /singlettwin / one of two /doublettriplet / one of threequadruplet / one of fourquintuplet /pentuplet / one of five
Number678910
Modifiersextuple /hextuple /sixfoldseptuple /heptuple /sevenfoldoctuple /eightfoldninefold /nonupletenfold /decuple
Wholesixsome /sextet /hexadsevensome /septet /heptadeightsome /octet /octadninesome /nonet /enneadtensome /decet /decad
Partsextuplet /hextuplet / one of sixone of seven /septuplet / heptupletoctuplet / one of eightone of nine /nonupletone of ten /decuplet
Number111213100many
Modifierelevenfold /undecuple /hendecupletwelvefold /duodecuplethirteenfold /tredecupleahundredfold /centuplemultiple
Wholeelevensometwelvesomethirteensomehundredsome
Partone of eleven /undecuplet / hendecupletone of twelve /duodecupletone of thirteen /tredecupletone of a hundred /centupletone of many /multiplet

Greek-based prefixes

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EnglishWikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia

Greek-based prefixes:

Historical numerals

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Numbers from abase-12 number system,base-20 numbers, and other historical numbers.

Duodecimal (base 12)

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NumberWordMathematical formula
6half dozen½ × 12
12dozen12
13baker's dozen12 + 1
13long dozen12 + 1
72half gross½ × (12 × 12)
120short gross10 × 12
120small gross10 × 12
120great hundred12 × 10
120long hundred12 × 10
144gross12 × 12
156long gross(12 + 1) × 12
1200long thousand12 × 100
1728great gross12 × 12 × 12

Vigesimal (base 20)

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NumberWordMathematical formula
20score20
40twoscore2 × 20
60threescore3 × 20
80fourscore4 × 20
100fivescore5 × 20
120sixscore6 × 20
140sevenscore7 × 20
160eightscore8 × 20
180ninescore9 × 20
200tenscore10 × 20

Parts of speech

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  • Cardinal numbers act as the part of speech known as "numerals". For example, in "two apples", "two" is a quantitative determiner (says how many there are) for the plural noun "apples".
  • Ordinal numbers act as adjectives. For example, "the second apple" specifies a property of a specific apple, which identifies its position or rank.
  • Fractional units act as nouns. For example, in "seven eighths", "seven" is a numeral that quantifies "eighths", a plural noun. Overall, this is a noun phrase. It can occur inpredeterminer position ("she used only seven eighths the amount of flour called for by the recipe"), or withof in apartitive construction like "seven eighths of the apple".
  • Unlike true numerals, terms likehundred,million, anddozen cannot function alone as determiners (*"hundred apples"). However, they can form a determiner when they follow a numeral ("thirty-one million", "two dozen"), or certain other determinatives ("the dozen apples", "several hundred apples"). These terms are most commonly classified as nouns, though some traditional grammars place them among adjectives.

Semantically, all these different parts of speech denote quantity or portion (albeit in different ways) and can be described as "numbers" (or numerals, as a synonym for numbers rather than as a grammatical part of speech).

See also

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Footnotes

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Notes

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  1. ^Especially for the 103-illion and the 300-illion, this method gives the same name ofTrecentillion to them and causes the confusion.

References

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  1. ^6. Compounding Rules inU.S. Government Printing Office Style Manual, govinfo.gov
  2. ^http://home.earthlink.net/~mrob/pub/math/largenum.html

Further reading

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