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View a machine-translated version of the Chinese article. Machine translation, like DeepL or Google Translate, is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the English Wikipedia.
A Chinese character set (simplified Chinese: 汉字字符集; traditional Chinese: 中文字元集; pinyin: hànzì zìfú jí) is a group of Chinese characters. Since the size of a set is the number of elements in it, an introduction to Chinese character sets will also introduce the Chinese character numbers in them.
At the same time, standard Chinese numerals were used in formal writing, akin to spelling out the numbers in English. Suzhou numerals were once popular in Chinese marketplaces, such as those in Hong Kong and Chinese restaurants in Malaysia before the 1990s, but they have gradually been supplanted by Hindu numerals.
However, the written numbers are questionable. When you spell out "Three Thousands" in English or 三千 in Chinese, it is a number for sure, but is it a numeral? Kowloonese 02:14, 5 November 2005 (UTC) Yeah, this article is just about how to write out numbers in Chinese words, even including regional usages. If you think that this article ...
This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 5 January 2025. "Hundred million" redirects here. For the song by Treble Charger, see Hundred Million. Natural number 100000000 List of numbers Integers ← 10 0 10 1 10 2 10 3 10 4 10 5 10 6 10 7 10 8 10 9 Cardinal One hundred million Ordinal 100000000th (one hundred millionth) Factorization 2 8 × 5 8 ...
956,619: 956619^2=915119911161, and only the digits 1, 5, 6 and 9 are used in both this number and its square. 967,680 = highly totient number [5] 970,299 = 99 3, the largest 6-digit cube; 998,001 = 999 2, the largest 6-digit square. The reciprocal of this number, in its expanded form, lists all three-digit numbers in order except 998. [59]
Radical 70 or radical square (方部) meaning "square" is one of the 34 Kangxi radicals (214 radicals in total) composed of 4 strokes. In the Kangxi Dictionary , there are 92 characters (out of 49,030) to be found under this radical .
Since 噸 is both a character and a word, it is a polyphonic monosemous character, as well as a polyphonic monosemous word. In December 1985, the Chinese government published the Table of Mandarin Words with Variant Pronunciation (普通话异读词审音表) to define the standard pronunciations for polyphonic monosemous characters. [54]