Āryabhaṭa numeration
0 (number)
100 (number)
10 (number)
1 (number)
200 (number)
20 (number)
2 (number)
300 (number)
30 (number)
3 (number)
400 (number)
40 (number)
4 (number)
500 (number)
50 (number)
5 (number)
600 (number)
60 (number)
6 (number)
700 (number)
70 (number)
7 (number)
800 (number)
80 (number)
8 (number)
900 (number)
90 (number)
9 (number)
A Greek-English Lexicon
Abjad numerals
Acrophonic
Acute accent
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Aegean numerals
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Center for the Greek language
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Digamma
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Dover Publications
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0 (number)
100 (number)
10 (number)
1 (number)
200 (number)
20 (number)
2 (number)
300 (number)
30 (number)
3 (number)
400 (number)
40 (number)
4 (number)
500 (number)
50 (number)
5 (number)
600 (number)
60 (number)
6 (number)
700 (number)
70 (number)
7 (number)
800 (number)
80 (number)
8 (number)
900 (number)
90 (number)
9 (number)
A Greek-English Lexicon
Abjad numerals
Acrophonic
Acute accent
Aegean numbers
Aegean numerals
Almagest
Alpha
Ancient Greek
Ancient Greek accent
Ancient Greek grammar
Ancient Greek grammar (tables)
Ancient Greek literature
Ancient Greek phonology
Arabic numerals
Archimedes
Armenian numerals
Astronomer
Attic numerals
Babylonian numerals
Beta
Binary numeral system
Book of Revelation
Brahmi numeral
Burmese numerals
Byzantine Empire
Byzantine literature
Cappadocian Greek language
Cardinal numbers
Center for the Greek language
Chalkidiki Greek
Chi (letter)
Chinese numerals
Counting rods
Cretan Greek
Cypriot Greek
Cypriot syllabary
Cyrillic numerals
Decimal
Delta (letter)
Demotic Greek
Digamma
Dipylon inscription
Dover Publications
Duodecimal
Earth
Eastern Arabic numerals
Egyptian numerals
Epsilon
Eta
Etruscan numerals
Euboean alphabet
G. J. Toomer
Gamma
Ge'ez script#Numerals
Gematria
Graeco-Armenian
Graeco-Aryan
Greece
Greek–Calabrian dialect
Greek Wikipedia
Greek alphabet
Greek diacritics
Greek exonyms
Greek language
Greek language question
Greek literature
Greek morphemes
Greek numerals
Greek orthography
Greek words for love
Numeral systems by culture
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Western Arabic
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Chinese
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Counting rods
Alphabetic numerals
Abjad
Armenian
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Cyrillic
Ge'ez
Greek (Ionian)
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Other systems
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Attic
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List of numeral system topics
Positional systems by base
Decimal (10)
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 8, 12, 16, 20, 60
List of numeral systems
v · d · e
The numerical signs ʹ and ͵ redirect here. For the accent, ´, see acute accent.
Greek numerals are a system of representing numbers using letters of the Greek alphabet. They are also known by the names Ionian numerals, Milesian numerals (i.e., from Miletus in Ionia), Alexandrian numerals, or alphabetic numerals. In modern Greece they are still in use for ordinal numbers and in situations similar to those in which Roman numerals are still used in the West: for ordinary (cardinal) numbers, however, Arabic numerals are used, just as in the West.
Contents
1 History
2 Description
3 Higher numbers
4 Hellenistic zero
5 See also
6 References
7 External links
History
Immortals: New trailer shows Greek Mythology in a 300 light
From the color scheme to certain scenes within the trailer, there definitely is a sense of déjà vu when watching…Yet, for those who love Greek Mythology ... holds a special significance in the binary numeral system, which is the base-2 number system ...
http://www.examiner.com/sci-fi-fantasy-pop-culture-in-national/immortals-new-trailer-shows-greek-mytholgy-a-300-light
From the color scheme to certain scenes within the trailer, there definitely is a sense of déjà vu when watching…Yet, for those who love Greek Mythology ... holds a special significance in the binary numeral system, which is the base-2 number system ...
http://www.examiner.com/sci-fi-fantasy-pop-culture-in-national/immortals-new-trailer-shows-greek-mytholgy-a-300-light
Greek numeration
These numerals are used much like the more familiar Roman numerals, but without ... Ionic Greek Numerals. The three names in parentheses are archaic characters ...
Originally, before the adoption of the Greek alphabet, Linear A and Linear B had used a different system, called Aegean numbers, with symbols for 1, 10, 100, 1000 and 10000 operating with the following formula: | = 1, – = 10, ◦ = 100, ¤ = 1000, ☼ = 10000.1
The earliest alphabet-related system of numerals used with the Greek letters was a set of the acrophonic Attic numerals, operating much like Roman numerals (which derived from this scheme), with: Ι = 1, Π = 5, Δ = 10, Η = 100, Χ = 1000, Μ = 10000; and with 50, 500, 5000, and 50000 represented by composites of Π and a tiny version of the applicable power of ten.1 The acrophonic system was replaced by a new alphabetic system, sometimes called the Ionic numeral system, from the 4th century BC.
Description
Each unit (1, 2, …, 9) was assigned a separate letter, each tens (10, 20, …, 90) a separate letter, and each hundreds (100, 200, …, 900) a separate letter. This requires 27 letters, so the 24-letter Greek alphabet was extended by using three obsolete letters: digamma ϝ,(also used are stigma ϛ or, in modern Greek, στ) for 6, qoppa ϟ for 90, and sampi ϡ for 900.2 To distinguish numerals from letters they are followed by the keraia (Greek κεραία, "hornlike projection"), a symbol ( ʹ ) similar to an acute sign ( ´ ) but with its own Unicode character (U+0374).
would be a difficult case to argue that and did not in some way influence the numerals and After 100 the Copts and Greeks went on define alphabetic letters as representing multiples of a hundred up to 900 The Ethiopians did this as well but ultimately did not introduce a new
http://www.geez.org/Numerals
Greek numerals - Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Greek numerals are a system of representing numbers using letters of the Greek alphabet. ... A "left keraia" (Unicode U+0375, Greek Lower Numeral Sign') is put in front of ...
This alphabetic system operates on the additive principle in which the numeric values of the letters are added together to form the total. For example, 241 is represented as σμαʹ (200 + 40 + 1). A famous example is 666 (the number of the Beast), which is represented as χξϛʹ (600 + 60 + 6) in medieval manuscripts of the Book of Revelation.
To represent numbers from 1,000 to 999,999 the same letters are reused to serve as thousands, tens of thousands, and hundreds of thousands. A "left keraia" (Unicode U+0375, ‘Greek Lower Numeral Sign’) is put in front of thousands to distinguish them from the standard use. For example, 2011 is represented as ͵βιαʹ (2000 + 11).
Letter
Value
Letter
Value
Letter
Value
αʹ
1
ιʹ
10
ρʹ
100
βʹ
2
κʹ
20
σʹ
200
γʹ
3
λʹ
30
τʹ
300
δʹ
4
μʹ
40
υʹ
400
εʹ
5
νʹ
50
φʹ
500
ϝʹ or ϛʹ or στʹ
6
ξʹ
60
χʹ
600
ζʹ
7
οʹ
70
ψʹ
700
ηʹ
8
πʹ
80
ωʹ
800
θʹ
9
ϟʹ
90
ϡʹ
900
greek numerals
First is the Acrophonic - this is type of Greek numerals that were used in ancient Greece up to Roman times (100 BC). It is called acrophonic ...
In modern Greek, uppercase letters are preferred, as in Φίλιππος Βʹ = Philip II.
Higher numbers
To represent greater numbers, the Greeks also used the myriad from the old Attic numeral system in their notation. Its value is 10,000; the number of myriads was written above its symbol (Mʹ). For example (keraias replaced for technical reasons):
Other forms are also possible. When that didn't suffice the myriad myriad (one hundred million, symbol: ΜΜʹ) was used.3
In his text The Sand Reckoner the natural philosopher Archimedes gives an upper bound of the number of grains of sand required to fill the entire universe, using a contemporary estimation of its size. This would defy the then-held notion that it is impossible to name a number greater than that of the sand on a beach, or on the entire world. In order to do that, he had to devise a new numeral scheme with much greater range; it is described here.
Hellenistic zero
Today the CAMPVS turns five As Eric noted What do the kids call that a lustrum And on that note before we can commence with the suovetaurilia we really should complete the census
http://campusmawrtius.blogspot.com/2004_09_12_archive.html?widgetType=BlogArchive&widgetId=BlogArchive1&action=toggle&dir=open&toggle=WEEKLY-1141534800000&toggleopen=WEEKLY-1235883600000
WikiTap - Greek numerals
Greek numerals are a system of representing numbers using letters of the Greek alphabet. ... Originally, before the adoption of the Greek alphabet, Linear A and Linear B had ...
Hellenistic astronomers extended alphabetic Greek numerals into a sexagesimal positional numbering system by limiting each position to a maximum value of 50 + 9 and including a special symbol for zero, which was also used alone like our modern zero, more than as a simple placeholder. However, the positions were usually limited to the fractional part of a number (called minutes, seconds, thirds, fourths, etc.) — they were not used for the integral part of a number. This system was probably adapted from Babylonian numerals by Hipparchus c. 140 BC. It was then used by Ptolemy (c. 140), Theon (c. 380), and Theon's daughter Hypatia (died 415).
The Greek sexagesimal place holder or zero symbol changed over time. The symbol used on papyri during the second century was a very small circle with an overbar several diameters long, terminated or not at both ends in various ways. Later, the overbar shortened to only one diameter, similar to our modern o macron (ō) which was still being used in late medieval Arabic manuscripts whenever alphabetic numerals were used. But the overbar was omitted in Byzantine manuscripts, leaving a bare ο (omicron). This gradual change from an invented symbol to ο does not support the hypothesis that the latter was the initial of ουδέν meaning "nothing".45
additional symbols were also Phoenician two of which F and Q became letters in the Roman alphabet while the third which did not is represented here by a variation of the Greek Sigma S The system clearly allows number values to be associated with words ciphers and opens many possibilities for numerology of all kinds The first example attributed to the Gnostics for a
http://www.files.chem.vt.edu/chem-dept/field/numbers.htm
Greek numerals - Citizendia
A numeral system (or system of numeration) is a Mathematical notation ... Greek numerals are a system of representing numbers using letters of the Greek alphabet. ...
Some of Ptolemy's true zeros appeared in the first line of each of his eclipse tables, where they were a measure of the angular separation between the center of the Moon and either the center of the Sun (for solar eclipses) or the center of Earth's shadow (for lunar eclipses). All of these zeros took the form 0 | 0 0, where Ptolemy actually used three of the symbols described in the previous paragraph. The vertical bar (|) indicates that the integral part on the left was in a separate column labeled in the headings of his tables as digits (of five arc-minutes each), whereas the fractional part was in the next column labeled minute of immersion, meaning sixtieths (and thirty-six-hundredths) of a digit.6
See also
Gematria
Greek numerals in Unicode (acrophonic, not alphabetic, numerals)
Isopsephy
References
^ a b Systèmes numéraux en Grèce ancienne: description et mise en perspective historique
^ Numerals: Stigma, Koppa, Sampi
^ A Manual of Greek Mathematics by Thomas Little Heath, p.18.
^ Neugebauer, Otto (1969) [1957]. The Exact Sciences in Antiquity (2 ed.). Dover Publications. pp. 13–14, plate 2. ISBN 978-048622332-2.
^ Raymond Mercier, Consideration of the Greek symbol 'zero'PDF (1.32 MiB) Numerous examples
^ Ptolemy's Almagest, translated by G. J. Toomer, Book VI, (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1998), pp.306–7.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Greek numerals
The Greek Number Converter
v · d · eGreek language · Eλληνική γλώσσα
History
Proto-Greek · Mycenaean (c. 1600–1000 BC) · Ancient Greek (c. 1000–330 BC) · Koine Greek (c. 330 BC–330) · Medieval Greek (330–1453) · Modern Greek (from 1453)
Alphabet
Orthography · Diacritics · History · Romanization · Numerals · Linear B · Kai · Dipylon inscription · Cypriot syllabary
Letters
Alpha · Beta · Gamma · Delta · Epsilon · Zeta · Eta · Theta · Iota · Kappa · Lambda · Mu · Nu · Xi · Omicron · Pi · Rho · Sigma · Tau · Upsilon · Phi · Chi · Psi · Omega · Obsolete: Digamma · Heta · Koppa · Stigma · San · Sampi
Phonology
Ancient Greek (accent) · Koine Greek · Modern Greek
Grammar
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Promotion and Study
Hellenic Foundation for Culture · Center for the Greek language
The example of such a system would be Greek alphabetic number system see Fig 3 Fig 3 Greek Alphabetic Numeral System Additive numeral systems of Type 3 In alphabetic numeral system each letter has a numeric value Then any number can be represented by the set of letters using the additive principle
http://www.simple-talk.com/sql/t-sql-programming/numeral-systems-and-numbers-conversion-in-sql
Greek Numerals
Greek Numerals. NB: This page uses Teknia Software's "mounce" Greek font (Mac and PC), which is free. ... on your machine before you can correctly view the Greek on this page. ...
<a href http bighugelabs com onblack php id4402909997 amp sizelarge rel nofollow >Zoom In< a> The V sign is a hand gesture in which the first and second fingers are raised and parted whilst the remaining fingers are clenched During World War II Winston Churchill popularised its use as a quot Victory quot sign for V as in victory initially with palm inwards and later in the war palm outwards The letter V originally comes from the Semitic letter Waw In Latin the letter V stood for the ooh sound like in the word moon There are over 145 baby names in the world that begin with the letter V The Greeks borrowed the letter V from the letter Y and simply removed the stick at the bottom The letter V is one of the few letters that actually has several movies named after it such as V Roman numeral for the number 5 and V For Vendetta In Roman numerals the letter V is used to represent the number 5 It was used because it resembled the convention of counting by notches carved in wood with every fifth notch double cut to form a quot V quot Source Wikipedia Popular words starting with quot V quot Vinoth My Name hehehe Victory Some unusual words starting with the letter quot V quot vacillate fluctuate in opinion or resolution vadimony bond or pledge given before a judge vafrous cunning sly vagient crying like a baby vainglory idle boastfulness veduta panoramic view of a town vegetivorous eating vegetables vendange grape harvest venditation offering for sale venerous lustful veracious truthful exact verecund modest shy vexillology study of flags vicereine wife of a viceroy videtur it seems virason sea breeze volacious apt or fit to fly volta old leaping dance vulpicide killing of a fox More unusual words can be found at <a href http phrontistery info v html rel nofollow >phrontistery info v html< a> <a href http fluidr com photos vinothchandar rel nofollow > View my Stream in Flui
http://www.flickr.com/photos/vinothchandar/4402909997/
Attic Greek Numerals > Jesus8880
the Greek people were taught their letters from the Phoenicians and ... The letter-numeral for "5" in the top table is the old Attic Greek symbol for pi (P) ...
Greek numerals - Wiktionary
Cardinal numeral – the neuter form is used in counting; when describing number some decline for gender. ... A system of numerals represented by letters of the Greek alphabet. ...
Greek numerals - Definition
Greek numerals are a system of representing numbers using letters of the Greek alphabet. ... The Greek sexagesimal place holder or zero symbol changed over time. ...
Since c600 BC each Greek letter has also functioned as a numeral 1 accordingly we may expand the given text to accomodate this feature thus The values assigned in this scheme of alphabetic numeration are written above each letter Each string of letters the words in this case represents a
http://www.whatabeginning.com/ASPECTS/ASPECTS_2.html







