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  2. Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Dates and numbers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Dates_and_numbers

    For dimensionless ratios (i.e. those without accompanying units), place a colon between integers, or place to between numbers-as-words: favored by a 3:1 ratio or a three-to-one ratio, not a 3/1 ratio or a 3–1 ratio. The same style is used to express odds in sport, gambling, and other statistical predictions.

  3. Wikipedia talk : Manual of Style/Dates and numbers/Archive 150

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Dates_and_numbers/Archive_150

    In the APA style, Publication Manual of the APA, 3.42, "Numbers expressed as figures", part d, "numbers that represent statistical or mathematical functions, fractions or decimal quantities, percentages, ratios, and quartiles". And it gives the example "3 times as many".

  4. English numerals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_numerals

    So too are the thousands, with the number of thousands followed by the word "thousand". The number one thousand may be written 1 000 or 1000 or 1,000; larger numbers are written for example 10 000 or 10,000 for ease of reading. European languages that use the comma as a decimal separator may correspondingly use the period as a thousands separator.

  5. Grammatical number - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grammatical_number

    In many languages, such as English, number is obligatorily expressed in every grammatical context. Some limit number expression to certain classes of nouns, such as animates or referentially prominent nouns (as with proximate forms in most Algonquian languages, opposed to referentially less prominent obviative forms). In others, such as Chinese ...

  6. How To Write Numbers in Words on a Check - AOL

    www.aol.com/write-numbers-words-check-000044077.html

    Hyphenate all numbers under 100 that need more than one word. For example, $73 is written as “seventy-three,” and the words for $43.50 are “Forty-three and 50/100.”

  7. Polite number - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polite_number

    In number theory, a polite number is a positive integer that can be written as the sum of two or more consecutive positive integers. A positive integer which is not polite is called impolite. [1] [2] The impolite numbers are exactly the powers of two, and the polite numbers are the natural numbers that are not powers of two.

  8. Decimal separator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decimal_separator

    For example, APA style stipulates a thousands separator for "most figures of 1000 or more" except for page numbers, binary digits, temperatures, etc. There are always "common-sense" country-specific exceptions to digit grouping, such as year numbers, postal codes, and ID numbers of predefined nongrouped format, which style guides usually point out.

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