Ram Viswanadha [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] wrote:

> does anyone know of any other systems that group digits
> other than in groups of threes?

Dzongkha (Bhutanese) & Tibetan traditionally follow a digit grouping
similar to the Indic one:

100           gchig brgya       [one hundred]
1,000         gchig stong       [one thousand]
10,000        gchig khri        [one myriad]
1,00,000      gchig 'bum        [one lakh]
10,00,000     sa ya gchig       [one million]
1,00,00,000   bye ba gchig      [one crore]
10,00,00,000  dung phyur gchig  [ten crores]
.... etc., etc., etc.,

(Though in the "Tibetan Autonomous Region" they may now use whatever number
grouping is generally used in the PRC).

There are Dzongkha and Tibetan terms for orders of numbers going up to
astronomical figures (and beyond).  Mostly these are translations of
originally Sanskrit terms. A whole list of both may be found in Sarat
Chandra Das' Tibetan-English Dictionary.

In these languages the normal digit group separator was a space not a
comma - though commas are now often used with traditional digits in modern
Dzongkha and Tibetan documents.

Dzongkha also sometimes uses a vigesimal system :-) - and instead of saying
fractions in the form "one and a half" they use the form  "half less than
two".

With both languages page or rather folio numbers are usually written out in
words though some numbers are written in an abbreviated form. Since only the
front of each folio is numbered you also end up with half the total number
you would in a "normal" page numbering system.

- Chris



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