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Vigesimal

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The vigesimal or base-20 numeral system is based on twenty (in the same way in which the ordinary decimal numeral system is based on ten).

Contents

[edit] Places

In a vigesimal place system, twenty individual numerals (or digit symbols) are used, ten more than in the usual decimal system. One modern method of finding the extra needed symbols is to write ten as the letter A20 (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 method skips over the letter "I", in order to avoid confusion between I20 as eighteen and 1 (one), so that the number eighteen is written as J20, and nineteen is written as K20. The number twenty is written as 1020.

According to this notation:

2020 means forty in decimal {= (2 × 201 + (0 × 200)}
DA20 means two hundred [and] seventy in decimal {= (13 × 201) + (10 × 200}
10020 means 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.

[edit] Vigesimal fractions

As with decimal, any number with a prime factor other than 2 or 5 will have a repeating expansion in vigesimal. However, the forms of familiar fractions are very different from those in decimal. The following table gives a list of the vigesimal expansion for some small reciprocals and for a few other denominators (listed as fractions in their decimal form) that yield very short vigesimal periods.

Note that J20 = 1810 and K20 = 1910.

\frac{1}{3} = .6D6D6D6D6D6D6D6D6D6D6D6D6D6D6D6D6D6D

\frac{1}{7} = .2H2H2H2H2H2H2H2H2H2H2H2H2H2H2H2H2H2H

\frac{1}{11} = .1G7591G7591G7591G7591G7591G7591G759

\frac{1}{13} = .1AF7DGH94C631AF7DGH94C631AF7DGH94C63

\frac{1}{421} = .00K00K00K00K00K00K00K00K00K00K00K00K

\frac{1}{401} = .00KK00KK00KK00KK00KK00KK00KK00KK00KK

\frac{1}{127} = .032KGH032KGH032KGH032KGH032KGH032KGH

\frac{1}{29} = .0DFH4GB0DFH4GB0DFH4GB0DFH4GB0DFH4GB

\frac{1}{71} = .05CDA8905CDA8905CDA8905CDA8905CDA89

\frac{1}{32719} = .0004HG10004HG10004HG10004HG10004HG1

\frac{1}{160001} = .0000KKKK0000KKKK0000KKKK0000KKKK

The number 6D20, equivalent to 133 in decimal is a cyclic number analogous to 142857 in decimal:

1AF7DGH94C6320 is also a cyclic number. It is equivalent to 315,076,919,876,923 in decimal.

160,00110 is a vigesimal generalized Fermat prime. In vigesimal it is 1000120 or, to describe its status as a generalized Fermat number, 20^{2^{ \overset{2} {}}} + 1.

[edit] Usage

In many languages, especially in Europe, 20 is 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).

[edit] Asia and North America

[edit] In Europe

According to German linguist Theo Vennemann, the vigesimal system in Europe is of Basque (Vasconic) origin and spread from the so-called Vasconic languages to other European tongues, such as many Celtic languages, French and Danish.

According to Menninger, the vigesimal system originated with the Normans and spread through them to Western Europe, the evidence being that Celtic languages often use vigesimal counting systems. Others believe that this theory is unlikely, however.

[edit] Related observations

[edit] Further reading

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Gvozdanović, Jadranka. Numeral Types and Changes Worldwide (1999), p.223.
  2. ^ Chatterjee, Suhas. 1963. On Didei nouns, pronouns, numerals, and demonstratives. Chicago: mimeo., 1963. (cf. Munda Bibliography at the University of Hawaii Department of Linguistics)
  3. ^ 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.)

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