The Heavenly Stems remain widely used as ordinals throughout the
Sinosphere, similarly to the way the alphabet is used in languages like English. • The Chinese mathematician
Li Shanlan (1810–1882) developed a system using the Heavenly Stems and Earthly Branches to stand in for Latin letters in their use as labels for
mathematical variables. In Li's system, the letters – are represented by the ten Heavenly Stems, – are represented by the twelve Earthly Branches, and the final four letters , , and are represented by ('matter'), ('Heaven'), ('earth'), and ('human') respectively. The radical may be added to any of the aforementioned character to indicate the upper case form of the corresponding letter: e.g. → , → ; → , → . •
Names for organic chemicals—e.g.
methanol (),
ethanol (). • Diseases—e.g.
Hepatitis A (),
Hepatitis B: (). • Sports leagues—e.g.
Serie A is rendered as . • Students' grades in Taiwan, with the inserted prior to the Heavenly Stems in the list—i.e. the American grades A, B, C, D and F correspond to , , , and . • In
astrology and
feng shui, the Heavenly Stems and Earthly Branches form the
four pillars of Chinese metaphysics in
Qimen Dunjia and
Daliuren. • In Korea and Japan, the Heavenly Stems are used in legal documents: the Korean renderings () and () are used to indicate the larger and the smaller parties to a legal contract, respectively—and are sometimes used as synonyms for such. This use is also common in the Korean IT industry. == See also ==