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Vigesimal - Wikipedia

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Base-20 numeral system

The Maya numerals are an example of a base-20 numeral system.

A vigesimal ( vij-ESS-im-əl) or base-20 (base-score) numeral system is based on twenty (in the same way in which the decimal numeral system is based on ten). Vigesimal is derived from the Latin adjective vicesimus, meaning 'twentieth'.

In a vigesimal place system, twenty individual numerals (or digit symbols) are used, ten more than in the decimal system. One modern method of finding the extra needed symbols is to write ten as the letter A, or A20 , where the 20 means base 20, to write nineteen as J20, and the numbers between with the corresponding letters of the alphabet. This is similar to the common computer-science practice of writing hexadecimal numerals over 9 with the letters "A–F". Another less common method skips over the letter "I", in order to avoid confusion between I20 as eighteen and one, so that the number eighteen is written as J20, and nineteen is written as K20. The number twenty is written as 1020.

Comparison Decimal Vigesimal Name spelled out
(in English) 0 0 zero 1 1 one 2 2 two 3 3 three 4 4 four 5 5 five 6 6 six 7 7 seven 8 8 eight 9 9 nine 10 A ten 11 B eleven 12 C twelve 13 D thirteen 14 E fourteen 15 F fifteen 16 G sixteen 17 H seventeen 18 I J eighteen 19 J K nineteen 20 10 twenty 400 100 four hundred 8000 1000 eight thousand 160000 10000 one hundred and
sixty thousand Vigesimal multiplication table 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C D E F G H I J 10 2 4 6 8 A C E G I 10 12 14 16 18 1A 1C 1E 1G 1I 20 3 6 9 C F I 11 14 17 1A 1D 1G 1J 22 25 28 2B 2E 2H 30 4 8 C G 10 14 18 1C 1G 20 24 28 2C 2G 30 34 38 3C 3G 40 5 A F 10 15 1A 1F 20 25 2A 2F 30 35 3A 3F 40 45 4A 4F 50 6 C I 14 1A 1G 22 28 2E 30 36 3C 3I 44 4A 4G 52 58 5E 60 7 E 11 18 1F 22 29 2G 33 3A 3H 44 4B 4I 55 5C 5J 66 6D 70 8 G 14 1C 20 28 2G 34 3C 40 48 4G 54 5C 60 68 6G 74 7C 80 9 I 17 1G 25 2E 33 3C 41 4A 4J 58 5H 66 6F 74 7D 82 8B 90 A 10 1A 20 2A 30 3A 40 4A 50 5A 60 6A 70 7A 80 8A 90 9A A0 B 12 1D 24 2F 36 3H 48 4J 5A 61 6C 73 7E 85 8G 97 9I A9 B0 C 14 1G 28 30 3C 44 4G 58 60 6C 74 7G 88 90 9C A4 AG B8 C0 D 16 1J 2C 35 3I 4B 54 5H 6A 73 7G 89 92 9F A8 B1 BE C7 D0 E 18 22 2G 3A 44 4I 5C 66 70 7E 88 92 9G AA B4 BI CC D6 E0 F 1A 25 30 3F 4A 55 60 6F 7A 85 90 9F AA B5 C0 CF DA E5 F0 G 1C 28 34 40 4G 5C 68 74 80 8G 9C A8 B4 C0 CG DC E8 F4 G0 H 1E 2B 38 45 52 5J 6G 7D 8A 97 A4 B1 BI CF DC E9 F6 G3 H0 I 1G 2E 3C 4A 58 66 74 82 90 9I AG BE CC DA E8 F6 G4 H2 I0 J 1I 2H 3G 4F 5E 6D 7C 8B 9A A9 B8 C7 D6 E5 F4 G3 H2 I1 J0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 A0 B0 C0 D0 E0 F0 G0 H0 I0 J0 100

According to this notation:

2020 is equivalent to forty in decimal = (2 × 201) + (0 × 200)
D020 is equivalent to two hundred and sixty in decimal = (13 × 201) + (0 × 200)
10020 is equivalent to four hundred in decimal = (1 × 202) + (0 × 201) + (0 × 200).

In the rest of this article below, numbers are expressed in decimal notation, unless specified otherwise. For example, 10 means ten, 20 means twenty. Numbers in vigesimal notation use the convention that I means eighteen and J means nineteen.

As 20 is divisible by two and five and is adjacent to 21, the product of three and seven, thus covering the first four prime numbers, many vigesimal fractions have simple representations, whether terminating or recurring (although thirds are more complicated than in decimal, repeating two digits instead of one). In decimal, dividing by three twice (ninths) only gives one digit periods (1/9 = 0.1111.... for instance) because 9 is the number below ten. 21, however, the number adjacent to 20 that is divisible by 3, is not divisible by 9. Ninths in vigesimal have six-digit periods. As 20 has the same prime factors as 10 (two and five), a fraction will terminate in decimal if and only if it terminates in vigesimal.

In decimal
Prime factors of the base: 2, 5
Prime factors of one below the base: 3
Prime factors of one above the base: 11 In vigesimal
Prime factors of the base: 2, 5
Prime factors of one below the base: J
Prime factors of one above the base: 3, 7 Fraction Prime factors
of the denominator
Positional representation Positional representation Prime factors
of the denominator
Fraction 1/2 2 0.5 0.A 2 1/2 1/3 3 0.3333... = 0.3 0.6D6D... = 0.6D 3 1/3 1/4 2 0.25 0.5 2 1/4 1/5 5 0.2 0.4 5 1/5 1/6 2, 3 0.16 0.36D 2, 3 1/6 1/7 7 0.142857 0.2H 7 1/7 1/8 2 0.125 0.2A 2 1/8 1/9 3 0.1 0.248HFB 3 1/9 1/10 2, 5 0.1 0.2 2, 5 1/A 1/11 11 0.09 0.1G759 B 1/B 1/12 2, 3 0.083 0.1D6 2, 3 1/C 1/13 13 0.076923 0.1AF7DGI94C63 D 1/D 1/14 2, 7 0.0714285 0.18B 2, 7 1/E 1/15 3, 5 0.06 0.16D 3, 5 1/F 1/16 2 0.0625 0.15 2 1/G 1/17 17 0.0588235294117647 0.13ABF5HCIG984E27 H 1/H 1/18 2, 3 0.05 0.1248HFB 2, 3 1/I 1/19 19 0.052631578947368421 0.1 J 1/J 1/20 2, 5 0.05 0.1 2, 5 1/10

The prime factorization of twenty is 22 × 5, so it is not a perfect power. However, its squarefree part, 5, is congruent to 1 (mod 4). Thus, according to Artin's conjecture on primitive roots, vigesimal has infinitely many cyclic primes, but the fraction of primes that are cyclic is not necessarily ~37.395%. An UnrealScript program that computes the lengths of recurring periods of various fractions in a given set of bases found that, of the first 15,456 primes, ~39.344% are cyclic in vigesimal.

Irrational numbers[edit] Algebraic irrational numbers In decimal In vigesimal 2 (the length of the diagonal of a unit square) 1.41421356237309... 1.85DE37JGF09H6... 3 (the length of the diagonal of a unit cube) 1.73205080756887... 1.ECG82BDDF5617... 5 (the length of the diagonal of a 1 × 2 rectangle) 2.2360679774997... 2.4E8AHAB3JHGIB... φ (phi, the golden ratio = 1+5/2) 1.6180339887498... 1.C7458F5BJII95... Transcendental irrational numbers In decimal In vigesimal π (pi, the ratio of circumference to diameter) 3.14159265358979... 3.2GCEG9GBHJ9D2... e (the base of the natural logarithm) 2.7182818284590452... 2.E7651H08B0C95... γ (the limiting difference between the harmonic series and the natural logarithm) 0.5772156649015328606... 0.BAHEA2B19BDIBI...

Many cultures that use a vigesimal system count in fives to twenty, then count twenties similarly. Such a system is referred to as quinary-vigesimal by linguists. Examples include Greenlandic, Iñupiaq, Kaktovik, Maya, Nunivak Cupʼig, and Yupʼik numerals.[1][2][3]

Vigesimal systems are common in Africa, for example in Yoruba.[4] While the Yoruba number system may be regarded as a vigesimal system, it is complex.[further explanation needed]

There is some evidence of base-20 usage in the Māori language of New Zealand with the suffix hoko- (i.e. hokowhitu, hokotahi).[citation needed]

In several European languages like French and Danish, 20 is used as a base, at least with respect to the linguistic structure of the names of certain numbers (though a thoroughgoing consistent vigesimal system, based on the powers 20, 400, 8000 etc., is not generally used).

Software applications[edit]

Open Location Code uses a word-safe version of base 20 for its geocodes. The characters in this alphabet were chosen to avoid accidentally forming words. The developers scored all possible sets of 20 letters in 30 different languages for likelihood of forming words, and chose a set that formed as few recognizable words as possible.[16] The alphabet is also intended to reduce typographical errors by avoiding visually similar digits, and is case-insensitive.

Word-safe base 20 Base 20 digit 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 Code digit 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 C F G H J M P Q R V W X Examples in Mesoamerican languages[edit] Powers of twenty in Yucatec Maya and Nahuatl[edit] Counting in units of twenty[edit]

This table shows the Maya numerals and the number names in Yucatec Maya, Nahuatl in modern orthography and in Classical Nahuatl.

  1. ^ Nykl, Alois Richard (September 1926). "The Quinary-Vigesimal System of Counting in Europe, Asia, and America". Language. 2 (3): 165–173. doi:10.2307/408742. JSTOR 408742. OCLC 50709582 – via Google Books. p. 165: A student of the American Indian languages is naturally led to investigate the wide-spread use of the quinary-vigesimal system of counting which he meets in the whole territory from Alaska along the Pacific Coast to the Orinoco and the Amazon.
  2. ^ Eells, Walter Crosby (October 14, 2004). "Number Systems of the North American Indians". In Anderson, Marlow; Katz, Victor; Wilson, Robin (eds.). Sherlock Holmes in Babylon: And Other Tales of Mathematical History. Mathematical Association of America. p. 89. ISBN 978-0-88385-546-1 – via Google Books. Quinary-vigesimal. This is most frequent. The Greenland Eskimo says 'other hand two' for 7, 'first foot two' for 12, 'other foot two' for 17, and similar combinations to 20, 'man ended.' The Unalit is also quinary to twenty, which is 'man completed.' ...
  3. ^ Chrisomalis 2010, p. 200: "The early origin of bar-and-dot numeration alongside the Middle Formative Mesoamerican scripts, the quinary-vigesimal structure of the system, and the general increase in the frequency and complexity of numeral expressions over time all point to its indigenous development.".
  4. ^ Zaslavsky, Claudia (1970). "Mathematics of the Yoruba People and of Their Neighbors in Southern Nigeria". The Two-Year College Mathematics Journal. 1 (2): 76–99. doi:10.2307/3027363. JSTOR 3027363. S2CID 163816234.
  5. ^ Bartley, Wm. Clark (January–February 1997). "Making the Old Way Count" (PDF). Sharing Our Pathways. 2 (1): 12–13. Retrieved February 27, 2017.
  6. ^ van Breugel, Seino. "11". A grammar of Atong. Brill.
  7. ^ Gvozdanović, Jadranka (1999). Numeral Types and Changes Worldwide. p. 223.
  8. ^ Chatterjee, Suhas. 1963. On Didei nouns, pronouns, numerals, and demonstratives. Chicago: mimeo., 1963. (cf. Munda Bibliography at the University of Hawaii Department of Linguistics)
  9. ^ Comrie, Bernard (2011). "Typology of numeral systems. Numeral types and changes worldwide" (PDF). Trends in Linguistics. Studies and monographs. 118. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2021-06-22.
  10. ^ Demiraj, Shaban (2006). The origin of the Albanians: linguistically investigated. Tirana: Academy of Sciences of Albania. p. 43. ISBN 978-99943-817-1-5.
  11. ^ Artículos publicados en la 1.ª época de "Euzkadi" : revista de Ciencias, Bellas Artes y Letras de Bilbao por Arana-Goiri'taŕ Sabin: 1901, Artículos publicados en la 1 época de "Euskadi" : revista de Ciencias, Bellas Artes y Letras de Bilbao por Arana-Goiri'ttarr Sabin : 1901, Sabino Arana, 1908, Bilbao, Eléxpuru Hermanos. 102–112
  12. ^ Artículos ..., Sabino Arana, 112–118
  13. ^ Efemérides Vascas y Reforma d ela Numeración Euzkérica, Sabino Arana, Biblioteca de la Gran Enciclopedia Vasca, Bilbao, 1969. Extracted from the magazine Euskal-Erria, 1880 and 1881.
  14. ^ Fran Ramovš, Karakteristika slovenskega narečja v Reziji in: Časopis za slovenski jezik, književnost in zgodovino, no 4, 1928, pages: 107-121 [1]
  15. ^ "dLib.si - LJUDJE OB TERU VI". www.dlib.si. Retrieved 2022-02-13.
  16. ^ "Open Location Code: An Open Source Standard for Addresses, Independent of Building Numbers And Street Names". github.com. Retrieved 25 August 2020.
  17. ^ The diachronic view is like this. Spanish: veinte < Latin: vīgintī, the IE etymology of which (view) connects it to the roots meaning '2' and 10'. (The etymological databases of the Tower of Babel project are referred here.)
  18. ^ Lau, S. A Practical Cantonese English Dictionary (1977) The Government Printer

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