Well, if you further nitpick you could use the "general" counters (numbers used when counting in a generic fashion) so mittsu would work (uses 3 hiragana in Japanese). In kanji, "ichi" (1) is the only one that works, since all numbers 1-9 use a single kanji. In hiragana, no numbers satisfy the same-number-of-characters-as-value criteria all the numbers 1-9 use two characters except for 2 and 5 (and sometimes 4) which use one. If you don't mind my being nitpicky, the Japanese "ni" and "san" don't really fit the condition because they'd be most commonly expressed in hiragana or kanji, two of the japanese alphabets. "vier" in German is the only other one I can think of (granted, I don't know the numbers in very many languages). Wikipedia, Google, Mathworld, Integer sequence DB Their value equals the number of letters they're spelled with. Some people are average, some are just mean. What do the following numbers have in common Topic: numbers in different languages (Read 1516 times) RIDDLES SITE WRITE MATH! Home Help Search Members Login RegisterĮasy (Moderators: william wu, Icarus, SMQ, ThudnBlunder, Eigenray, Grimbal, towr) « wu :: forums - numbers in different languages » Wu :: forums - numbers in different languages
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