Indian numerals



         


Numeral systems

Arabic numerals
Armenian numerals
Babylonian numerals
Chinese numerals
Greek numerals
Hebrew numerals
Indian numerals
Japanese numerals
Maya numerals
Roman numerals
Thai numerals

Numeral system


India has produced many numeral systems. Arguably, any of these numeral systems could be called the Indian numeral system. For the purpose of this article however the term Indian numeral system will refer only to the positional base 10 numeral systems that developed in India and the term Indian numerals will refer only to the numerals that are part of the Devanagari script.

The Arabic numerals are a slightly modified shapes of the Indian system.

Written below is a list of the Indian numerals, their corresponding Arabic numeral and their Hindi pronunciation.

Devanagari NumeralArabic NumeralPronunciation
0shuunya
1ek
2do
3tiin
4chaar
5paanch
6chhe
7saath
8aaTh
9nau


Today these numerals are used in all Indian languages that use the Devanagari script. Most Indian languages which use other Brahmic scripts use the Indian numeral systems, except with different symbols for each numeral.

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History

The Indian numerals have been traced back to abour 50 BC. Prior to that, the Brahmi numerals used similar forms, except that 10 was represented as a fish. It is this fish shape that became the "10" of the Indian numerals. This numeral system spread to the Middle East and later came to be called the Arabic numeral system, although the Arabs continue to call their numerals the Indian numerals. In 662 a Nestorian bishop living in what is now called Iraq said of the numeral system:

I will omit all discussion of the science of the Indians ... of their subtle discoveries in astronomy - discoveries that are more ingenious than those of the Greeks and the Babylonians - and of their valuable methods of calculation which surpass description. I wish only to say that this computation is done by means of nine signs. If those who believe that because they speak Greek they have arrived at the limits of science would read the Indian texts they would be convinced even if a little late in the day that there are others who know something of value."
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Reference

Georges Ifrah, The Universal History of Numbers. John Wiley, 2000.





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