numeral (linguistics)

{{short description|Word or phrase which describes a numerical quantity}}

{{About|number words|the mathematical notation of numbers|numeral system}}

In linguistics, a numeral in the broadest sense is a word or phrase that describes a numerical quantity. Some theories of grammar use the word "numeral" to refer to cardinal numbers that act as a determiner that specify the quantity of a noun, for example the "two" in "two hats". Some theories of grammar do not include determiners as a part of speech and consider "two" in this example to be an adjective. Some theories consider "numeral" to be a synonym for "number" and assign all numbers (including ordinal numbers like "first") to a part of speech called "numerals".Charles Follen: A Practical Grammar of the German Language. Boston, 1828, p. 9, p. 44 and 48. Quote: "PARTS OF SPEECH. There are ten parts of speech, viz. Article, Substantive or Noun, Adjective, Numeral, Pronoun, Verb, Adverb, Preposition, Conjunction, and Interjection.", "NUMERALS. The numbers are divided into cardinal, ordinal, proportional, distributive, and collective. [...] Numerals of proportion and distribution are [...] &c. Observation. The above numerals, in fach or fäl´tig, are regularly declined, like other adjectives."Horace Dalmolin: The New English Grammar: With Phonetics, Morphology and Syntax, Tate Publishing & Enterprises, 2009, p. 175 & p. 177. Quote: "76. The different types of words used to compose a sentence, in order to relate an idea or to convey a thought, are known as parts of speech. [...] The parts of speech, with a brief definition, will follow. [...] 87. Numeral: Numerals are words that express the idea of number. There are two types of numerals: cardinal and ordinal. The cardinal numbers (one, two, three...) are used for counting people, objects, etc. Ordinal numbers (first, second, third...) can indicate order, placement in rank, etc." Numerals in the broad sense can also be analyzed as a noun ("three is a small number"), as a pronoun ("the two went to town"), or for a small number of words as an adverb ("I rode the slide twice").

Numerals can express relationships like quantity (cardinal numbers), sequence (ordinal numbers), frequency (once, twice), and part (fraction).{{Cite web|url=http://www-01.sil.org/linguistics/glossaryoflinguisticterms/WhatIsANumeral.htm|title=What is a numeral?|access-date=2017-03-06|archive-date=2016-11-25|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161125083926/http://www-01.sil.org/Linguistics/GlossaryofLinguisticTerms/WhatIsANumeral.htm|url-status=live}}

Identifying numerals

{{Redirect-distinguish|collective numeral|collective number|collective noun}}

Numerals may be attributive, as in two dogs, or pronominal, as in I saw two (of them).

Many words of different parts of speech indicate number or quantity. Such words are called quantifiers. Examples are words such as every, most, least, some, etc. Numerals are distinguished from other quantifiers by the fact that they designate a specific number. Examples are words such as five, ten, fifty, one hundred, etc. They may or may not be treated as a distinct part of speech; this may vary, not only with the language, but with the choice of word. For example, "dozen" serves the function of a noun, "first" serves the function of an adjective, and "twice" serves the function of an adverb. In Old Church Slavonic, the cardinal numbers 5 to 10 were feminine nouns; when quantifying a noun, that noun was declined in the genitive plural like other nouns that followed a noun of quantity (one would say the equivalent of "five of people"). In English grammar, the classification "numeral" (viewed as a part of speech) is reserved for those words which have distinct grammatical behavior: when a numeral modifies a noun, it may replace the article: the/some dogs played in the parktwelve dogs played in the park. (*dozen dogs played in the park is not grammatical, so "dozen" is not a numeral in this sense.) English numerals indicate cardinal numbers. However, not all words for cardinal numbers are necessarily numerals. For example, million is grammatically a noun, and must be preceded by an article or numeral itself.

Numerals may be simple, such as 'eleven', or compound, such as 'twenty-three'.

In linguistics, however, numerals are classified according to purpose: examples are ordinal numbers (first, second, third, etc.; from 'third' up, these are also used for fractions), multiplicative (adverbial) numbers (once, twice, and thrice), multipliers (single, double, and triple), and distributive numbers (singly, doubly, and triply). Georgian,{{cite web| url = http://wals.info/feature/description/| title = Walsinfo.com}}{{Dead link|date=August 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} Latin, and Romanian (see Romanian distributive numbers) have regular distributive numbers, such as Latin {{lang|la|singuli}} "one-by-one", {{lang|la|bini}} "in pairs, two-by-two", {{lang|la|terni}} "three each", etc. In languages other than English, there may be other kinds of number words. For example, in Slavic languages there are collective numbers (monad, pair/dyad, triad) which describe sets, such as pair or dozen in English (see Russian numerals, Polish numerals).

Some languages have a very limited set of numerals, and in some cases they arguably do not have any numerals at all, but instead use more generic quantifiers, such as 'pair' or 'many'. However, by now most such languages have borrowed the numeral system or part of the numeral system of a national or colonial language, though in a few cases (such as Guarani{{Cite web|title=Numbers in Guaraní (Papapy Avañe'ême)|url=https://omniglot.com/language/numbers/guarani.htm|access-date=2021-06-11|website=omniglot.com|archive-date=2021-06-11|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210611191500/https://omniglot.com/language/numbers/guarani.htm|url-status=live}}), a numeral system has been invented internally rather than borrowed. Other languages had an indigenous system but borrowed a second set of numerals anyway. An example is Japanese, which uses either native or Chinese-derived numerals depending on what is being counted.

In many languages, such as Chinese, numerals require the use of numeral classifiers. Many sign languages, such as ASL, incorporate numerals.

Larger numerals

English has derived numerals for multiples of its base (fifty, sixty, etc.), and some languages have simplex numerals for these, or even for numbers between the multiples of its base. Balinese, for example, currently has a decimal system, with words for 10, 100, and 1000, but has additional simplex numerals for 25 (with a second word for 25 only found in a compound for 75), 35, 45, 50, 150, 175, 200 (with a second found in a compound for 1200), 400, 900, and 1600. In Hindustani, the numerals between 10 and 100 have developed to the extent that they need to be learned independently.

In many languages, numerals up to the base are a distinct part of speech, while the words for powers of the base belong to one of the other word classes. In English, these higher words are hundred 102, thousand 103, million 106, and higher powers of a thousand (short scale) or of a million (long scale—see names of large numbers). These words cannot modify a noun without being preceded by an article or numeral (*hundred dogs played in the park), and so are nouns.

In East Asia, the higher units are hundred, thousand, myriad 104, and powers of myriad. In the Indian subcontinent, they are hundred, thousand, lakh 105, crore 107, and so on. The Mesoamerican system, still used to some extent in Mayan languages, was based on powers of 20: bak’ 400 (202), pik 8000 (203), kalab 160,000 (204), etc.

Numerals of cardinal numbers

{{More citations needed|section|date=April 2019}}

The cardinal numbers have numerals. In the following tables, [and] indicates that the word and is used in some dialects (such as British English), and omitted in other dialects (such as American English).

This table demonstrates the standard English construction of some cardinal numbers. (See next table for names of larger cardinals.)

class="wikitable sortable mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"
ValueNameAlternate names, and names for sets of the given size
align="right" | 0Zeroaught, cipher, cypher, donut, dot, duck, goose egg, love, nada, naught, nil, none, nought, nowt, null, ought, oh, squat, zed, zilch, zip, zippo
align="right" | 1Oneace, individual, single, singleton, unary, unit, unity
align="right" | 2Twobinary, brace, couple, couplet, distich, deuce, double, doubleton, duad, duality, duet, duo, dyad, pair, span, twain, twin, twosome, yoke
align="right" | 3Threedeuce-ace, leash, set, tercet, ternary, ternion, terzetto, threesome, tierce, trey, triad, trine, trinity, trio, triplet, troika, hat-trick
align="right" | 4Fourfoursome, quadruplet, quatern, quaternary, quaternity, quartet, tetrad
align="right" | 5Fivecinque, fin, fivesome, pentad, quint, quintet, quintuplet
align="right" | 6Sixhalf dozen, hexad, sestet, sextet, sextuplet, sise
align="right" | 7Sevenheptad, septet, septuple, walking stick
align="right" | 8Eightoctad, octave, octet, octonary, octuplet, ogdoad
align="right" | 9Nineennead
align="right" | 10Tendeca, decade, das (India)
align="right" | 11Elevenonze, ounze, ounce, banker's dozen
align="right" | 12Twelvedozen
align="right" | 13Thirteenbaker's dozen, long dozen{{cite web|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cDkSAAAAYAAJ&q=%22long%20score%22%2021&pg=PA417|title=The Shipmaster's Assistant, and Commercial Digest: Containing Information Useful to Merchants, Owners, and Masters of Ships|last=Blunt|first=Joseph|date=1 January 1837|publisher=E. & G.W. Blunt|via=Google Books}}
align="right" | 20Twentyscore,
align="right" | 21Twenty-onelong score, blackjack
align="right" | 22Twenty-twoDeuce-deuce
align="right" | 24Twenty-fourtwo dozen
align="right" | 40Fortytwo-score
align="right" | 50Fiftyhalf-century
align="right" | 55Fifty-fivedouble nickel
align="right" | 60Sixtythree-score
align="right" | 70Seventythree-score and ten
align="right" | 80Eightyfour-score
align="right" | 87Eighty-sevenfour-score and seven
align="right" | 90Ninetyfour-score and ten
align="right" | 100One hundredcentred, century, ton, short hundred
align="right" | 111One hundred [and] eleveneleventy-one{{cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2003/jan/02/jrrtolkien.books|title=Tolkien catches up with his hobbit|last=Ezard|first=John|date=2 Jan 2003|work=The Guardian|access-date=6 Apr 2018}}
align="right" | 120One hundred [and] twentylong hundred, great hundred, (obsolete) hundred
align="right" | 144One hundred [and] forty-fourgross, dozen dozen, small gross
align="right" |{{gaps|1|000}}One thousandchiliad, grand, G, thou, yard, kilo, k, millennium, Hajaar (India), ten hundred
align="right" |{{gaps|1|024}}One thousand [and] twenty-fourkibi or kilo in computing, see binary prefix (kilo is shortened to K, Kibi to Ki)
align="right" |{{gaps|1|100}}One thousand one hundredEleven hundred
align="right" |{{gaps|1|728}}One thousand seven hundred [and] twenty-eightgreat gross, long gross, dozen gross
align="right" |{{gaps|10|000}}Ten thousandmyriad, wan (China)
align="right" |{{gaps|100|000}}One hundred thousandlakh
align="right" |{{gaps|500|000}}Five hundred thousandcrore (Iranian)
align="right" |{{gaps|1|000|000}}One millionMega, meg, mil, (often shortened to M)
align="right" |{{gaps|1|048|576}}One million forty-eight thousand five hundred [and] seventy-sixMibi or Mega in computing, see binary prefix (Mega is shortened to M, Mibi to Mi)
align="right" |{{gaps|10|000|000}}Ten millioncrore (Indian)(Pakistan)
align="right" |{{gaps|100|000|000}}One hundred millionyi (China)

= English names for powers of 10 =

This table compares the English names of cardinal numbers according to various American, British, and Continental European conventions. See English numerals or names of large numbers for more information on naming numbers.

class="wikitable sortable mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"
style="text-align: center"

! !!Short scale!! colspan="2" |Long scale

style="background: #eeeeff; text-align: center"

! Value !! American!! British
(Nicolas Chuquet) !! Continental European
(Jacques Peletier du Mans)

100colspan="3" align="center" | One
101colspan="3" align="center" | Ten
102colspan="3" align="center" | Hundred
103colspan="3" align="center" | Thousand
106colspan="3" align="center" | Million
109BillionThousand millionMilliard
1012Trillioncolspan="2" align="center" | Billion
1015QuadrillionThousand billionBilliard
1018Quintillioncolspan="2" align="center" | Trillion
1021SextillionThousand trillionTrilliard
1024Septillioncolspan="2" align="center" | Quadrillion
1027OctillionThousand quadrillionQuadrilliard
1030Nonillioncolspan="2" align="center" | Quintillion
1033DecillionThousand quintillionQuintilliard
1036Undecillioncolspan="2" align="center" | Sextillion
1039DuodecillionThousand sextillionSextilliard
1042Tredecillioncolspan="2" align="center" | Septillion
1045QuattuordecillionThousand septillionSeptilliard
1048Quindecillioncolspan="2" align="center" | Octillion
1051SexdecillionThousand octillionOctilliard
1054Septendecillioncolspan="2" align="center" | Nonillion
1057OctodecillionThousand nonillionNonilliard
1060Novemdecillioncolspan="2" align="center" | Decillion
1063VigintillionThousand decillionDecilliard
1066Unvigintillioncolspan="2" align="center" | Undecillion
1069DuovigintillionThousand undecillionUndecilliard
1072Trevigintillioncolspan="2" align="center" | Duodecillion
1075QuattuorvigintillionThousand duodecillionDuodecilliard
1078Quinvigintillioncolspan="2" align="center" | Tredecillion
1081SexvigintillionThousand tredecillionTredecilliard
1084Septenvigintillioncolspan="2" align="center" | Quattuordecillion
1087OctovigintillionThousand quattuordecillionQuattuordecilliard
1090Novemvigintillioncolspan="2" align="center" | Quindecillion
1093TrigintillionThousand quindecillionQuindecilliard
1096Untrigintillioncolspan="2" align="center" | Sexdecillion
1099DuotrigintillionThousand sexdecillionSexdecilliard
10120Novemtrigintillioncolspan="2" align="center" | Vigintillion
10123QuadragintillionThousand vigintillionVigintilliard
10153QuinquagintillionThousand quinvigintillionQuinvigintilliard
10180Novemquinquagintillioncolspan="2" align="center" | Trigintillion
10183SexagintillionThousand trigintillionTrigintilliard
10213SeptuagintillionThousand quintrigintillionQuintrigintilliard
10240Novemseptuagintillioncolspan="2" align="center" | Quadragintillion
10243OctogintillionThousand quadragintillionQuadragintilliard
10273NonagintillionThousand quinquadragintillionQuinquadragintilliard
10300Novemnonagintillioncolspan="2" align="center" | Quinquagintillion
10303CentillionThousand quinquagintillionQuinquagintilliard
10360Cennovemdecillioncolspan="2" align="center" | Sexagintillion
10420Cennovemtrigintillioncolspan="2" align="center" | Septuagintillion
10480Cennovemquinquagintillioncolspan="2" align="center" | Octogintillion
10540Cennovemseptuagintillioncolspan="2" align="center" | Nonagintillion
10600Cennovemnonagintillioncolspan="2" align="center" |Centillion
10603DucentillionThousand centillionCentilliard

There is no consistent and widely accepted way to extend cardinals beyond centillion (centilliard).

= {{anchor|Myriad system}} Myriad, Octad, and [[-yllion]] systems =

The following table details the myriad, octad, Ancient Greek Archimedes's notation, Chinese myriad, Chinese long and -yllion names for powers of 10.

There is also a Knuth-proposed system notation of numbers, named the -yllion system.{{Cite web|title=Large Numbers (page 2) at MROB|url=http://mrob.com/pub/math/largenum-2.html#yllion|access-date=2020-12-23|website=mrob.com|archive-date=2012-02-13|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120213070143/http://mrob.com/pub/math/largenum-2.html#yllion|url-status=live}} In this system, a new word is invented for every 2n-th power of ten.

class="wikitable sortable mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"
ValueMyriad System NameOctad System NameAncient Greek Myriad ScaleChinese Myriad ScaleChinese Long ScaleKnuth-proposed
System Name
100

| align="center" | One

| align="center" | One

| align="center" | εἷς (heîs)

|

|

| align="center" | One

101

| align="center" | Ten

| align="center" | Ten

| align="center" | δέκα (déka)

|

|

| align="center" | Ten

102

| align="center" | Hundred

| align="center" | Hundred

| align="center" | ἑκατόν (hekatón)

|

|

| align="center" | Hundred

103

| align="center" | Thousand

| align="center" | Thousand

| align="center" | χίλιοι (khī́lioi)

|

|

| align="center" | Ten hundred

104

| align="center" | Myriad

| align="center" | Myriad

| align="center" | μύριοι (mýrioi)

| ()

| ()

| align="center" | Myriad

105

| align="center" | Ten myriad

| align="center" | Ten myriad

| align="center" | δεκάκις μύριοι (dekákis mýrioi)

| 十萬 (十万)

| 十萬 (十万)

| align="center" | Ten myriad

106

| align="center" | Hundred myriad

| align="center" | Hundred myriad

| align="center" | ἑκατοντάκις μύριοι (hekatontákis mýrioi)

| 百萬 (百万)

| 百萬 (百万)

| align="center" | Hundred myriad

107

| align="center" | Thousand myriad

| align="center" | Thousand myriad

| align="center" | χιλιάκις μύριοι (khiliákis mýrioi)

| 千萬 (千万)

| 千萬 (千万)

| align="center" | Ten hundred myriad

108

| align="center" | Second myriad

| align="center" | Octad

| align="center" | μυριάκις μύριοι (muriákis mýrioi)

| (亿)

| (亿)

| align="center" | Myllion

109

| align="center" | Ten second myriad

| align="center" | Ten octad

| align="center" | δεκάκις μυριάκις μύριοι (dekákis muriákis múrioi)

|十億 (十亿)

|十億 (十亿)

| align="center" | Ten myllion

1010

| align="center" | Hundred second myriad

| align="center" | Hundred octad

| align="center" | ἑκατοντάκις μυριάκις μύριοι (hekatontákis muriákis múrioi)

|百億 (百亿)

|百億 (百亿)

| align="center" | Hundred myllion

1011

| align="center" | Thousand second myriad

| align="center" | Thousand octad

| align="center" | χῑλῐάκῐς μυριάκις μύριοι (khīliákis muriákis múrioi)

|千億 (千亿)

|千億 (千亿)

| align="center" | Ten hundred myllion

1012

| align="center" | Third myriad

| align="center" | Myriad octad

| align="center" | μυριάκις μυριάκις μύριοι (muriákis muriákis mýrioi)

|

| 萬億 (万亿)

| align="center" | Myriad myllion

1013

| align="center" | Ten third myriad

| align="center" | Ten myriad octad

| align="center" | δεκάκις μυριάκις μυριάκις μύριοι (dekákis muriákis muriákis mýrioi)

| 十兆

| 十萬億 (十万亿)

| align="center" | Ten myriad myllion

1014

| align="center" | Hundred third myriad

| align="center" | Hundred myriad octad

| align="center" | ἑκατοντάκις μυριάκις μυριάκις μύριοι (hekatontákis muriákis muriákis mýrioi)

| 百兆

| 百萬億 (百万亿)

| align="center" | Hundred myriad myllion

1015

| align="center" | Thousand third myriad

| align="center" | Thousand myriad octad

| align="center" | χιλιάκις μυριάκις μυριάκις μύριοι (khiliákis muriákis muriákis mýrioi)

| 千兆

| 千萬億 (千万亿)

| align="center" | Ten hundred myriad myllion

1016

| align="center" | Fourth myriad

| align="center" | Second octad

| align="center" | μυριάκις μυριάκις μυριάκις μύριοι (muriákis muriákis muriákis mýrioi)

|

|

| align="center" | Byllion

1017

| align="center" | Ten fourth myriad

| align="center" | Ten second octad

| align="center" | δεκάκις μυριάκις μυριάκις μυριάκις μύριοι (dekákis muriákis muriákis muriákis mýrioi)

| 十京

| 十兆

| align="center" | Ten byllion

1018

| align="center" | Hundred fourth myriad

| align="center" | Hundred second octad

| align="center" | ἑκατοντάκις μυριάκις μυριάκις μυριάκις μύριοι (hekatontákis muriákis muriákis muriákis mýrioi)

| 百京

| 百兆

| align="center" | Hundred byllion

1019

| align="center" | Thousand fourth myriad

| align="center" | Thousand second octad

| align="center" | χιλιάκις μυριάκις μυριάκις μυριάκις μύριοι (khiliákis muriákis muriákis muriákis mýrioi)

| 千京

| 千兆

| align="center" | Ten hundred byllion

1020

| align="center" | Fifth myriad

| align="center" | Myriad second octad

| align="center" | μυριάκις μυριάκις μυριάκις μυριάκις μύριοι (muriákis muriákis muriákis muriákis mýrioi)

|

| 萬兆

| align="center" | Myriad byllion

1021

| align="center" | Ten fifth myriad

| align="center" | Ten myriad second octad

| align="center" | δεκάκις μυριάκις μυριάκις μυριάκις μυριάκις μύριοι (dekákis muriákis muriákis muriákis muriákis mýrioi)

| 十垓

| 十萬兆

| align="center" | Ten myriad byllion

1022

| align="center" | Hundred fifth myriad

| align="center" | Hundred myriad second octad

| align="center" | ἑκατοντάκις μυριάκις μυριάκις μυριάκις μυριάκις μύριοι (hekatontákis muriákis muriákis muriákis muriákis mýrioi)

| 百垓

| 百萬兆

| align="center" | Hundred myriad byllion

1023

| align="center" | Thousand fifth myriad

| align="center" | Thousand myriad second octad

| align="center" | χιλιάκις μυριάκις μυριάκις μυριάκις μυριάκις μύριοι (khiliákis muriákis muriákis muriákis muriákis mýrioi)

| 千垓

| 千萬兆

| align="center" | Ten hundred myriad byllion

1024

| align="center" | Sixth myriad

| align="center" | Third octad

| align="center" | μυριάκις μυριάκις μυριάκις μυριάκις μυριάκις μύριοι (muriákis muriákis muriákis muriákis muriákis mýrioi)

| (in China); 𥝱 (in Japan)

| 億兆

| align="center" | Myllion byllion

1028

| align="center" | Seventh myriad

| align="center" | Myriad third octad

|

|

| 萬億兆

| align="center" | Myriad myllion byllion

1032

| align="center" | Eighth myriad

| align="center" | Fourth octad

|

| ()

|

| align="center" | Tryllion

1036

| align="center" | Ninth myriad

| align="center" | Myriad fourth octad

|

| ()

| 萬京

| align="center" | Myriad tryllion

1040

| align="center" | Tenth myriad

| align="center" | Fifth octad

|

|

| 億京

| align="center" | Myllion tryllion

1044

| align="center" | Eleventh myriad

| align="center" | Myriad fifth octad

|

| ()

| 萬億京

| align="center" | Myriad myllion tryllion

1048

| align="center" | Twelfth myriad

| align="center" | Sixth octad

|

| () (in China and in Japan)

| 兆京

| align="center" | Byllion tryllion

1052

| align="center" | Thirteenth myriad

| align="center" | Myriad sixth octad

|

|恆河沙 (恒河沙) (in China)

| 萬兆京

| align="center" | Myriad byllion tryllion

1056

| align="center" | Fourteenth myriad

| align="center" | Seventh octad

|

|阿僧祇 (in China); 恒河沙 (in Japan)

| 億兆京

| align="center" | Myllion byllion tryllion

1060

| align="center" | Fifteenth myriad

| align="center" | Myriad seventh octad

|

|那由他, 那由多 (in China)

| 萬億兆京

| align="center" | Myriad myllion byllion tryllion

1064

| align="center" | Sixteenth myriad

| align="center" | Eighth octad

|

|不可思議 (不可思议) (in China), 阿僧祇 (in Japan)

|

| align="center" | Quadyllion

1068

| align="center" | Seventeenth myriad

| align="center" | Myriad eighth octad

|

|無量大數 (无量大数) (in China)

| 萬垓

| align="center" | Myriad quadyllion

1072

| align="center" | Eighteenth myriad

| align="center" | Ninth octad

|

|那由他, 那由多 (in Japan)

| 億垓

| align="center" | Myllion quadyllion

1080

| align="center" | Twentieth myriad

| align="center" | Tenth octad

|

|不可思議 (in Japan)

| 兆垓

| align="center" | Byllion quadyllion

1088

| align="center" | Twenty-second myriad

| align="center" | Eleventh octad

|

|無量大数 (in Japan)

| 億兆垓

| align="center" | Myllion byllion quadyllion

10128

| align="center" | Thirty-second myriad

| align="center" | Sixteenth octad

|

|

|

| align="center" | Quinyllion

10256

| align="center" | Sixty-fourth myriad

| align="center" | Thirty-second octad

|

|

|

| align="center" | Sexyllion

10512

| align="center" | 128th myriad

| align="center" | Sixty-fourth octad

|

|

| ()

| align="center" | Septyllion

101,024

| align="center" | 256th myriad

| align="center" | 128th octad

|

|

| ()

| align="center" | Octyllion

102,048

| align="center" | 512th myriad

| align="center" | 256th octad

|

|

|

| align="center" | Nonyllion

104,096

| align="center" | 1024th myriad

| align="center" | 512th octad

|

|

| ()

| align="center" | Decyllion

108,192

| align="center" | 2048th myriad

| align="center" | 1024th octad

|

|

| ()

| align="center" | Undecyllion

1016,384

| align="center" | 4096th myriad

| align="center" | 2048th octad

|

|

|恆河沙 (恒河沙)

| align="center" | Duodecyllion

1032,768

| align="center" | 8192nd myriad

| align="center" | 4096th octad

|

|

|阿僧祇

| align="center" | Tredecyllion

1065,536

| align="center" | 16384th myriad

| align="center" | 8192nd octad

|

|

|那由他, 那由多

| align="center" | Quattuordecyllion

10131,072

| align="center" | 32768th myriad

| align="center" | 16384th octad

|

|

|不可思議 (不可思议)

| align="center" | Quindecyllion

10262,144

| align="center" | 65536th myriad

| align="center" | 32768th octad

|

|

|無量大數 (无量大数)

| align="center" | Sexdecyllion

10524,288

| align="center" | 131072nd myriad

| align="center" | 65536th octad

|

|

|

| align="center" | Septendecyllion

101,048,576

| align="center" | 262144th myriad

| align="center" | 131072nd octad

|

|

|

| align="center" | Octodecyllion

102,097,152

| align="center" | 524288th myriad

| align="center" | 262144th octad

|

|

|

| align="center" | Novemdecyllion

104,194,304

| align="center" | 1048576th myriad

| align="center" | 524288th octad

|

|

|

| align="center" | Vigintyllion

10232

| align="center" | 1073741824th myriad

| align="center" | 536870912nd octad

|

|

|

| align="center" | Trigintyllion

10242

| align="center" | 1099511627776th myriad

| align="center" | 549755813888th octad

|

|

|

| align="center" | Quadragintyllion

10252

|

|

|

|

|

| align="center" | Quinquagintyllion

10262

|

|

|

|

|

| align="center" | Sexagintyllion

10272

|

|

|

|

|

| align="center" | Septuagintyllion

10282

|

|

|

|

|

| align="center" | Octogintyllion

10292

|

|

|

|

|

| align="center" | Nonagintyllion

102102

|

|

|

|

|

| align="center" | Centyllion

1021,002

|

|

|

|

|

| align="center" | Millyllion

10210,002

|

|

|

|

|

| align="center" | Myryllion

{{anchor|Fractional numbers}} Fractional numerals

{{See also|Fraction (mathematics)#Vocabulary|English numerals#Fractions and decimals}}

This is a table of English names for non-negative rational numbers less than or equal to 1. It also lists alternative names, but there is no widespread convention for the names of extremely small positive numbers.

Keep in mind that rational numbers like 0.12 can be represented in infinitely many ways, e.g. zero-point-one-two (0.12), twelve percent (12%), three twenty-fifths ({{sfrac|3|25}}), nine seventy-fifths ({{sfrac|9|75}}), six fiftieths ({{sfrac|6|50}}), twelve hundredths ({{sfrac|12|100}}), twenty-four two-hundredths ({{sfrac|24|200}}), etc.

class="wikitable sortable mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"
ValueFractionCommon names
1

| align="center" | {{sfrac|1|1}}

| One, Unity, Whole

0.9

| align="center" | {{sfrac|9|10}}

| Nine tenths, [zero] point nine

{{gaps|0.833|333...}}

| align="center" | {{sfrac|5|6}}

| Five sixths

0.8

| align="center" | {{sfrac|4|5}}

| Four fifths, eight tenths, [zero] point eight

0.75

| align="center" | {{sfrac|3|4}}

| three quarters, three fourths, seventy-five hundredths, [zero] point seven five

0.7

| align="center" | {{sfrac|7|10}}

| Seven tenths, [zero] point seven

{{gaps|0.666|666...}}

| align="center" | {{sfrac|2|3}}

| Two thirds

0.6

| align="center" | {{sfrac|3|5}}

| Three fifths, six tenths, [zero] point six

0.5

| align="center" | {{sfrac|1|2}}

| One half, five tenths, [zero] point five

0.4

| align="center" | {{sfrac|2|5}}

| Two fifths, four tenths, [zero] point four

{{gaps|0.333|333...}}

| align="center" | {{sfrac|1|3}}

| One third

0.3

| align="center" | {{sfrac|3|10}}

| Three tenths, [zero] point three

0.25

| align="center" | {{sfrac|1|4}}

| One quarter, one fourth, twenty-five hundredths, [zero] point two five

0.2

| align="center" | {{sfrac|1|5}}

| One fifth, two tenths, [zero] point two

{{gaps|0.166|666...}}

| align="center" | {{sfrac|1|6}}

| One sixth

{{gaps|0.142|857|142|857...}}

| align="center" | {{sfrac|1|7}}

| One seventh

0.125

| align="center" | {{sfrac|1|8}}

| One eighth, one-hundred-[and-]twenty-five thousandths, [zero] point one two five

{{gaps|0.111|111...}}

| align="center" | {{sfrac|1|9}}

| One ninth

0.1

| align="center" | {{sfrac|1|10}}

| One tenth, [zero] point one, One perdecime, one perdime

{{gaps|0.090|909...}}

| align="center" | {{sfrac|1|11}}

| One eleventh

0.09

| align="center" | {{sfrac|9|100}}

| Nine hundredths, [zero] point zero nine

{{gaps|0.083|333...}}

| align="center" | {{sfrac|1|12}}

| One twelfth

0.08

| align="center" | {{sfrac|2|25}}

| Two twenty-fifths, eight hundredths, [zero] point zero eight

{{gaps|0.076|923|076|923...}}

| align="center" | {{sfrac|1|13}}

| One thirteenth

{{gaps|0.071|428|571|428...}}

| align="center" | {{sfrac|1|14}}

| One fourteenth

{{gaps|0.066|666...}}

| align="center" | {{sfrac|1|15}}

| One fifteenth

0.0625

| align="center" | {{sfrac|1|16}}

| One sixteenth, six-hundred-[and-]twenty-five ten-thousandths, [zero] point zero six two five

{{gaps|0.055|555...}}

| align="center" | {{sfrac|1|18}}

| One eighteenth

0.05

| align="center" | {{sfrac|1|20}}

| One twentieth, five hundredths, [zero] point zero five

{{gaps|0.047|619|047|619...}}

| align="center" | {{sfrac|1|21}}

| One twenty-first

{{gaps|0.045|454|545...}}

| align="center" | {{sfrac|1|22}}

| One twenty-second

{{gaps|0.043|478|260|869|565|217|391|304|347...}}

| align="center" | {{sfrac|1|23}}

| One twenty-third

{{gaps|0.041|666...}}

| align="center" | {{sfrac|1|24}}

| One twenty-fourth

0.04

| align="center" | {{sfrac|1|25}}

| One twenty-fifth, four hundredths, [zero] point zero four

{{gaps|0.033|333...}}

| align="center" | {{sfrac|1|30}}

| One thirtieth

0.03125

| align="center" | {{sfrac|1|32}}

| One thirty-second, thirty one-hundred [and] twenty five hundred-thousandths, [zero] point zero three one two five

0.03

| align="center" | {{sfrac|3|100}}

| Three hundredths, [zero] point zero three

0.025

| align="center" | {{sfrac|1|40}}

| One fortieth, twenty-five thousandths, [zero] point zero two five

0.02

| align="center" | {{sfrac|1|50}}

| One fiftieth, two hundredths, [zero] point zero two

{{gaps|0.016|666...}}

| align="center" | {{sfrac|1|60}}

| One sixtieth

0.015625

| align="center" | {{sfrac|1|64}}

| One sixty-fourth, ten thousand fifty six-hundred [and] twenty-five millionths, [zero] point zero one five six two five

{{gaps|0.012|345|679|012|345|679...}}

| align="center" | {{sfrac|1|81}}

| One eighty-first

{{gaps|0.010|101...}}

| align="center" | {{sfrac|1|99}}

| One ninety-ninth

0.01

| align="center" | {{sfrac|1|100}}

| One hundredth, [zero] point zero one, One percent

{{gaps|0.009|900|990|099...}}

| align="center" | {{sfrac|1|101}}

| One hundred-first

{{gaps|0.008|264|462|809|917|355|371|900...}}

| align="center" | {{sfrac|1|121}}

| One over one hundred twenty-one

0.001

| align="center" | {{sfrac|1|1000}}

| One thousandth, [zero] point zero zero one, One permille

{{gaps|0.000|277|777...}}

| align="center" | {{sfrac|1|3600}}

| One thirty-six hundredth

0.0001

| align="center" | {{sfrac|1|{{gaps|10|000}}}}

| One ten-thousandth, [zero] point zero zero zero one, One myriadth, one permyria, one permyriad, one basis point

{{gaps|0.000|01}}

| align="center" | {{sfrac|1|{{gaps|100|000}}}}

| One hundred-thousandth, [zero] point zero zero zero zero one, One lakhth, one perlakh

{{gaps|0.000|001}}

| align="center" | {{sfrac|1|{{gaps|1|000|000}}}}

| One millionth, [zero] point zero zero zero zero zero one, One ppm

{{gaps|0.000|000|1}}

| align="center" | {{sfrac|1|{{gaps|10|000|000}}}}

| One ten-millionth, One crorth, one percrore

{{gaps|0.000|000|01}}

| align="center" | {{sfrac|1|{{gaps|100|000|000}}}}

| One hundred-millionth

{{gaps|0.000|000|001}}

| align="center" | {{sfrac|1|{{gaps|1|000|000|000}}}}

| One billionth (in some dialects), One ppb

{{gaps|0.000|000|000|001}}

| align="center" | {{sfrac|1|{{gaps|1|000|000|000|000}}}}

| One trillionth, One ppt

0

| align="center" | {{sfrac|0|1}}

| Zero, Nil

Other specific quantity terms

{{See also|Non-numerical words for quantities}}

Various terms have arisen to describe commonly used measured quantities.

  • Unit: 1 (based on a single entity of counting or measurement of an object or item)
  • Pair: 2 (the base of the binary numeral system)
  • Leash: 3 (the base of the trinary numeral system)
  • Dozen: 12 (the base of the duodecimal numeral system)
  • Baker's dozen: 13 (based on a group of thirteen objects or items)
  • Score: 20 (the base of the vigesimal numeral system)
  • Shock: 60 (the base of the sexagesimal numeral system){{cite book |last1=Cardarelli |first1=François |title=Encyclopaedia of Scientific Units, Weights and Measures: Their SI Equivalences and Origins |date=2012 |publisher=Springer |isbn=978-1447100034 |page=585 |edition=Second}}
  • Gross: (based on a group of 144 objects or items)
  • Great gross: (based on a group of 1,728 objects or items)

Basis of counting system

Not all peoples use counting, at least not verbally. Specifically, there is not much need for counting among hunter-gatherers who do not engage in commerce. Many languages around the world have no numerals above two to four (if they are actually numerals at all, and not some other part of speech)—or at least did not before contact with the colonial societies—and speakers of these languages may have no tradition of using the numerals they did have for counting. Indeed, several languages from the Amazon have been independently reported to have no specific number words other than 'one'. These include Nadëb, pre-contact Mocoví and Pilagá, Culina and pre-contact Jarawara, Jabutí, Canela-Krahô, Botocudo (Krenák), Chiquitano, the Campa languages, Arabela, and Achuar.{{Cite web |url=http://www2.gslt.hum.gu.se/dissertations/hammarstrom.pdf |title=Hammarström (2009, page 197) "Rarities in numeral systems" |access-date=2010-06-16 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120308070048/http://www2.gslt.hum.gu.se/dissertations/hammarstrom.pdf |archive-date=2012-03-08 |url-status=dead }} Some languages of Australia, such as Warlpiri, do not have words for quantities above two,UCL Media Relations, [http://www.ucl.ac.uk/media/library/aboriginal "Aboriginal kids can count without numbers"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180620234700/http://www.ucl.ac.uk/media/library/aboriginal |date=2018-06-20 }}{{cite journal |last1=Butterworth |first1=Brian |last2=Reeve |first2=Robert |last3=Reynolds |first3=Fiona |last4=Lloyd |first4=Delyth |title=Numerical thought with and without words: Evidence from indigenous Australian children |journal=PNAS |date=2 September 2008 |volume=105 |issue=35 |pages=13179–13184 |doi=10.1073/pnas.0806045105 |pmid=18757729 |pmc=2527348 |bibcode=2008PNAS..10513179B |quote=[Warlpiri] has three generic types of number words: singular, dual plural, and greater than dual plural. |doi-access=free }}The Science Show, [http://www.abc.net.au/rn/scienceshow/stories/2008/2375526.htm Genetic anomaly could explain severe difficulty with arithmetic] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100301113203/http://www.abc.net.au/rn/scienceshow/stories/2008/2375526.htm |date=2010-03-01 }}, Australian Broadcasting Corporation and neither did many Khoisan languages at the time of European contact. Such languages do not have a word class of 'numeral'.

Most languages with both numerals and counting use base 8, 10, 12, or 20. Base 10 appears to come from counting one's fingers, base 20 from the fingers and toes, base 8 from counting the spaces between the fingers (attested in California), and base 12 from counting the knuckles (3 each for the four fingers).Bernard Comrie, "[http://ling.cass.cn/pdf/TypNum_China_10ho.pdf The Typology of Numeral Systems] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110514035109/http://ling.cass.cn//pdf/TypNum_China_10ho.pdf |date=2011-05-14 }}", p. 3

=No base=

Many languages of Melanesia have (or once had) counting systems based on parts of the body which do not have a numeric base; there are (or were) no numerals, but rather nouns for relevant parts of the body—or simply pointing to the relevant spots—were used for quantities. For example, 1–4 may be the fingers, 5 'thumb', 6 'wrist', 7 'elbow', 8 'shoulder', etc., across the body and down the other arm, so that the opposite little finger represents a number between 17 (Torres Islands) to 23 (Eleman). For numbers beyond this, the torso, legs and toes may be used, or one might count back up the other arm and back down the first, depending on the people.{{cn|date=August 2024}}

=2: binary=

{{main article|Binary numeral system}}

Binary systems are based on the number 2, using zeros and ones. Due to its simplicity, only having two distinct digits, binary is commonly used in computing, with zero and one often corresponding to "off/on" respectively.

=3: ternary=

{{main|Ternary numeral system#Practical usage}}

Ternary systems are based on the number 3, having practical usage in some analog logic, in baseball scoring and in self–similar mathematical structures.

=4: quaternary=

{{Main|Quaternary numeral system}}

Quaternary systems are based on the number 4. Some Austronesian, Melanesian, Sulawesi, and Papua New Guinea ethnic groups, count with the base number four, using the term asu or aso, the word for dog, as the ubiquitous village dog has four legs.Ryan, Peter. Encyclopaedia of Papua and New Guinea. Melbourne University Press & University of Papua and New Guinea,:1972 {{isbn|0-522-84025-6}}.: 3 pages p 219. This is argued by anthropologists to be also based on early humans noting the human and animal shared body feature of two arms and two legs as well as its ease in simple arithmetic and counting. As an example of the system's ease a realistic scenario could include a farmer returning from the market with fifty asu heads of pig (200), less 30 asu (120) of pig bartered for 10 asu (40) of goats noting his new pig count total as twenty asu: 80 pigs remaining. The system has a correlation to the dozen counting system and is still in common use in these areas as a natural and easy method of simple arithmetic.Aleksandr Romanovich Luriicac, Lev Semenovich Vygotskiĭ, Evelyn Rossiter. Ape, primitive man, and child: essays in the history of behavior. CRC Press: 1992: {{isbn|1-878205-43-9}}.

=5: quinary=

{{Main|Quinary}}

Quinary systems are based on the number 5. It is almost certain the quinary system developed from counting by fingers (five fingers per hand).Heath, Thomas, A Manual of Greek Mathematics, Courier Dover: 2003. {{isbn|978-0-486-43231-1}} page, p:11 An example are the Epi languages of Vanuatu, where 5 is luna 'hand', 10 lua-luna 'two hand', 15 tolu-luna 'three hand', etc. 11 is then lua-luna tai 'two-hand one', and 17 tolu-luna lua 'three-hand two'.

5 is a common auxiliary base, or sub-base, where 6 is 'five and one', 7 'five and two', etc. Aztec was a vigesimal (base-20) system with sub-base 5.

=6: senary=

{{Main|Senary}}

Senary systems are based on the number 6. The Morehead-Maro languages of Southern New Guinea are examples of the rare base 6 system with monomorphemic words running up to 66. Examples are Kanum and Kómnzo. The Sko languages on the North Coast of New Guinea follow a base-24 system with a sub-base of 6.

=7: septenary=

Septenary systems are based on the number 7. Septenary systems are very rare, as few natural objects consistently have seven distinctive features. Traditionally, it occurs in week-related timing. It has been suggested that the Palikúr language has a base-seven system, but this is dubious.Parkvall, M. Limits of Language, 1st edn. 2008. p.291. {{ISBN|978-1-59028-210-6}}

=8: octal=

{{Main|Octal}}

Octal systems are based on the number 8. Examples can be found in the Yuki language of California and in the Pamean languages of Mexico, because the Yuki and Pame keep count by using the four spaces between their fingers rather than the fingers themselves.{{citation

| title=Ethnomathematics: A Multicultural View of Mathematical Ideas

| first=Marcia

| last=Ascher|author-link= Marcia Ascher

| year=1994

| publisher=Chapman & Hall

| isbn=0-412-98941-7

}}

=9: nonary=

Nonary systems are based on the number 9. It has been suggested that Nenets has a base-nine system.

=10: decimal=

{{Main|Decimal}}

Decimal systems are based on the number 10. A majority of traditional number systems are decimal. This dates back at least to the ancient Egyptians, who used a wholly decimal system. Anthropologists hypothesize this may be due to humans having five digits per hand, ten in total.Scientific American Munn& Co: 1968, vol 219: 219 There are many regional variations including:

=12: duodecimal=

{{Main|Duodecimal}}

Duodecimal systems are based on the number 12.

These include:

Duodecimal numeric systems have some practical advantages over decimal. It is much easier to divide the base digit twelve (which is a highly composite number) by many important divisors in market and trade settings, such as the numbers 2, 3, 4 and 6.

Because of several measurements based on twelve,such as twelve months in a year, the twelve-hour clock, twelve inches to the foot, twelve pence to the shilling many Western languages have words for base-twelve units such as dozen, gross and great gross, which allow for rudimentary duodecimal nomenclature, such as "two gross six dozen" for 360. Ancient Romans used a decimal system for integers, but switched to duodecimal for fractions, and correspondingly Latin developed a rich vocabulary for duodecimal-based fractions (see Roman numerals). A notable fictional duodecimal system was that of J. R. R. Tolkien's Elvish languages, which used duodecimal as well as decimal.

=16: hexadecimal=

{{Main|hexadecimal}}

Hexadecimal systems are based on the number 16.

The traditional Chinese units of measurement were base-16. For example, one jīn (斤) in the old system equals sixteen taels. The suanpan (Chinese abacus) can be used to perform hexadecimal calculations such as additions and subtractions.{{Cite web|url=http://totton.idirect.com/soroban/Hex_as/|title=算盤 Hexadecimal Addition & Subtraction on a Chinese Abacus|website=totton.idirect.com|access-date=2019-06-26|archive-date=2019-07-06|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190706221609/http://totton.idirect.com/soroban/Hex_as/|url-status=live}}

South Asian monetary systems were base-16. One rupee in Pakistan and India was divided into 16 annay. A single anna was subdivided into four paisa or twelve pies (thus there were 64 paise or 192 pies in a rupee). The anna was demonetised as a currency unit when India decimalised its currency in 1957, followed by Pakistan in 1961.

=20: vigesimal=

{{Main|Vigesimal}}

Vigesimal systems are based on the number 20. Anthropologists are convinced the system originated from digit counting, as did bases five and ten, twenty being the number of human fingers and toes combined.Georges Ifrah, The Universal History of Numbers: The Modern Number System, Random House, 2000: {{isbn|1-86046-791-1}}. 1262 pages

The system is in widespread use across the world. Some include the classical Mesoamerican cultures, still in use today in the modern indigenous languages of their descendants, namely the Nahuatl and Mayan languages (see Maya numerals). A modern national language which uses a full vigesimal system is Dzongkha in Bhutan.

Partial vigesimal systems are found in some European languages: Basque, Celtic languages, French (from Celtic), Danish, and Georgian. In these languages the systems are vigesimal up to 99, then decimal from 100 up. That is, 140 is 'one hundred two score', not *seven score, and there is no numeral for 400 (great score).

The term score originates from tally sticks, and is perhaps a remnant of Celtic vigesimal counting. It was widely used to learn the pre-decimal British currency in this idiom: "a dozen pence and a score of bob", referring to the 20 shillings in a pound. For Americans the term is most known from the opening of the Gettysburg Address: "Four score and seven years ago our fathers...".

=24: quadrovigesimal=

Quadrovigesimal systems are based on the number 24. The Sko languages have a base-24 system with a sub-base of 6.

=32: duotrigesimal=

{{Main|Duotrigesimal}}

Duotrigesimal systems are based on the number 32. The Ngiti ethnolinguistic group uses a base 32 numeral system.

=60: sexagesimal=

{{Main|Sexagesimal}}

Sexagesimal systems are based on the number 60. Ekari has a base-60 system. Sumeria had a base-60 system with a decimal sub-base (with alternating cycles of 10 and 6), which was the origin of the numbering of modern degrees, minutes, and seconds.

=80: octogesimal=

Octogesimal systems are based on the number 80. Supyire is said to have a base-80 system; it counts in twenties (with 5 and 10 as sub-bases) up to 80, then by eighties up to 400, and then by 400s (great scores).

{{interlinear|indent=2

|kàmpwóò ŋ̀kwuu sicyɛɛré ná béé-tàànre ná kɛ́ ná báár-ìcyɛ̀ɛ̀rè

|{four hundred} eighty four and twenty-three and ten and five-four

|}}

799 [i.e. 400 + (4 x 80) + (3 x 20) + {10 + (5 + 4)}]’

See also

=Numerals in various languages=

A database [https://mpi-lingweb.shh.mpg.de/numeral Numeral Systems of the World's Languages] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161221000001/https://mpi-lingweb.shh.mpg.de/numeral/ |date=2016-12-21 }} compiled by Eugene S.L. Chan of Hong Kong is hosted by the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, Germany. The database currently contains data for about 4000 languages.

=Related topics=

Notes

{{Reflist}}

Further reading

  • Crespo Cantalapiedra, I. (2023). [https://zenodo.org/records/10225997 La diversidad en las lenguas: los numerales] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240224123657/https://zenodo.org/records/10225997 |date=2024-02-24 }}. Online book (in Spanish).
  • {{cite book|author=James R. Hurford|title=The Linguistic Theory of Numerals|year=2010|orig-year=1975|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-0-521-13368-5|author-link=James R. Hurford}}

{{Authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Number Names}}

*

Category:Names