Some numbers have special names in addition to their regular names, most depending on context. • 0: •
zero: formal scientific usage •
nought: mostly British usage, common in science to refer to subscript 0 indicating an initial state •
naught: archaic term for nothingness, which may or may not be equivalent to the number; mostly American usage, old-fashioned spelling of
nought •
aught: proscribed but still occasionally used when a digit is 0 (as in "thirty-aught-six", the
.30-06 Springfield rifle
cartridge and by association guns that fire it).
Aughts can also refer to the first decade of this century in American English, though it may not be universally understood. •
oh: used when spelling numbers (like telephone, bank account, bus line [British: bus route]) but can cause confusion with the letter
o if reading a mix of numbers and letters •
nil: in general sport scores, British usage (
"The score is two–nil.") •
nothing: in general sport scores, American usage (
"The score is two–nothing.") •
null: to an object or idea related to nothingness. The
0th
aleph number (\aleph_0) is pronounced "aleph-null". •
love: in tennis, badminton,
squash and similar sports (origin disputed, said by the
Oxford English Dictionary to be from the idea that when one does a thing "for love", that is for no monetary gain, the word "love" implies "nothing". The previously held belief that it originated from , due to its shape, is no longer widely accepted) •
zilch, (
from Spanish)
, zip: used informally when stressing nothingness; this is true especially in combination with one another (
"You know nothing—zero, zip, , zilch!"); American usage •
nix: also used as a verb; mostly American usage •
cypher / cipher: archaic, from French , in turn from
Arabic , meaning zero •
goose egg (informal) •
duck (used in cricket when a batsman is dismissed without scoring) •
blank the half of a domino tile with no pips • 1: •
ace in certain sports and games, as in tennis or golf, indicating success with one stroke, and the face of a die, playing card or domino half with one pip •
birdie in golf denotes one stroke less than
par, and
bogey, one stroke more than par •
solo •
unit •
linear the
degree of a polynomial is 1; also for explicitly denoting the first power of a unit:
linear metre •
unity in mathematics •
protagonist first actor in
theatre of Ancient Greece, similarly
Proto-Isaiah and
proton • 2: •
couple •
brace, from
Old French "arms" (the plural of arm), as in "what can be held in two arms". •
pair •
deuce the face of a die, playing card or domino half with two pips •
eagle in golf denotes two strokes less than par •
duo •
quadratic the degree of a polynomial is 2 • also
square or
squared for denoting the second power of a unit:
square metre or
metre squared •
penultimate, second from the end •
deuteragonist second actor in theatre of Ancient Greece, similarly
Deutero-Isaiah and
deuteron • 3: •
trey the face of a die or playing card with three pips, a three-point field goal in basketball, nickname for the third carrier of the same personal name in a family •
trio •
trips: three-of-a-kind in a poker hand. a player has three cards with the same numerical value •
cubic the degree of a polynomial is 3 • also
cube or
cubed for denoting the third power of a unit:
cubic metre or
metre cubed •
albatross in golf denotes three strokes less than par. Sometimes called
double eagle •
hat-trick or
hat trick: achievement of three feats in sport or other contexts •
antepenultimate third from the end •
tritagonist third actor in theatre of Ancient Greece, similarly
Trito-Isaiah and
triton •
turkey in bowling, three consecutive strikes • 4: •
cater: (rare) the face of a die or playing card with four pips •
quartet •
quartic or
biquadratic the degree of a polynomial is 4 •
quad (short for
quadruple or the like) several specialized sets of four, such as four of a kind in poker, a carburetor with four inputs, etc., •
condor in golf denotes four strokes less than par •
preantepenultimate fourth from the end • 5: •
cinque or
cinq (rare) the face of a die or playing card with five pips •
quintet •
nickel (informal American, from the value of the five-cent
US nickel, but applied in non-monetary references) •
quintic the degree of a polynomial is 5 •
quint (short for
quintuplet or the like) several specialized sets of five, such as quintuplets, etc. • 6: •
half a dozen •
sice (rare) the face of a die or playing card with six pips •
sextet •
sextic or
hectic the degree of a polynomial is 6 • 7: •
septet •
septic or
heptic the degree of a polynomial is 7 • 8: •
octet • 9: •
nonet • 10: •
dime (informal American, from the value of the ten-cent
US dime, but applied in non-monetary references) •
decet •
decade, used for years but also other groups of 10 as in
rosary prayers or
Braille symbols • 11: •
undecet • a
banker's dozen • 12: •
duodecet • a
dozen (first
power of the
duodecimal base), used mostly in commerce • 13: a
baker's dozen • 20: a
score (first power of the
vigesimal base), nowadays archaic; famously used in the opening of the
Gettysburg Address:
"Four score and seven years ago..." The
Number of the beast in the
King James Bible is rendered "Six hundred threescore and six". Also in The Book of Common Prayer, Psalm 90 as used in the Burial Service—"The days of our age are threescore years and ten; ...." • 25: a
pony is a bet of £25 in British betting slang. • 50: half-century, literally half of a hundred, usually used in
cricket scores. • 55:
double-nickel (informal American) • 60: a
shock: historical commercial count, described as "three scores". • 100: • A century, also used in
cricket scores and in cycling for 100 miles. • A
ton, in Commonwealth English, the speed of 100 mph or 100 km/h. • A
small hundred or
short hundred (archaic, see 120 below) • 120: • A
great hundred or long hundred (twelve tens; as opposed to the
small hundred, i.e. 100 or ten tens), also called
small gross (ten dozens), both archaic • Also sometimes referred to as
duodecimal hundred, although that could literally also mean 144, which is twelve squared • 144: a
gross (a dozen dozens, second power of the duodecimal base), used mostly in commerce • 500: • a ream, usually of paper. • a
monkey is a bet of £500 in British betting slang. • 1000: • a
grand, colloquially used especially when referring to money, also in fractions and multiples, e.g. half a grand, two grand, etc. Grand can also be shortened to "G" in many cases. • K, originally from the abbreviation of kilo-, e.g. "He only makes $20K a year." •
Millennium (plural:
millennia), a period of one thousand years. •
kilo- (Greek for "one thousand"), a decimal unit prefix in the
Metric system denoting multiplication by "one thousand". For example: 1 kilometre = 1000 metres. • 1728: a
great gross (a dozen gross, third power of the duodecimal base), used historically in commerce • 10,000: a
myriad (a hundred hundred), commonly used in the sense of an indefinite very high number • 100,000: a
lakh (a hundred thousand), in Indian English • 10,000,000: a
crore (a hundred lakh), in Indian English and written as . • 10100:
googol (1 followed by 100 zeros), used in mathematics • 10
googol:
googolplex (1 followed by a googol of zeros) • 10
googolplex:
googolplexplex (1 followed by a googolplex of zeros) Combinations of numbers in most sports scores are read as in the following examples: • 1–0 British English:
one-nil; American English:
one-nothing,
one-zip, or
one-zero • 0–0 British English:
nil-nil or
nil all; American English:
zero-zero or
nothing-nothing, (occasionally
scoreless or
no score) • 2–2
two-two or
two all; American English also
twos,
two to two,
even at two, or
two up. Naming conventions of
Tennis scores (and related sports) are different from other sports. The centuries of Italian culture have names in English borrowed from Italian: •
duecento "(one thousand and) two hundred" for the years 1200 to 1299, or approximately 13th century •
trecento 14th century •
quattrocento 15th century •
cinquecento 16th century •
seicento 17th century •
settecento 18th century •
ottocento 19th century •
novecento 20th century •
ventesimo 21st century When reading numbers in a sequence, such as a telephone or serial number, British people will usually use the terms
double followed by the repeated number. Hence
007 is
double oh seven. Exceptions are the emergency telephone number
999, which is always
nine nine nine and the apocalyptic "
Number of the beast", which is always
six six six. In the US,
911 (the US emergency telephone number) is usually read
nine one one, while 9/11 (in reference to the
September 11, 2001, attacks) is usually read
nine eleven. == Multiplicative adverbs and adjectives ==