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Quotes About Numerals

Googol?'' ''That's a one with one hundred zeroes after it.
~ Jonathan Safran Foer
Confusingly, these signs are known as Arabic numerals even though they were first invented by the Hindus (even more confusingly, modern Arabs use a set of digits that look quite different from Western ones). But the Arabs get the credit because when they invaded India they encountered the system, understood its usefulness, refined it, and spread it through the Middle East and then to Europe.
~ Yuval Noah Harari
She doesn't understand the concept of Roman numerals. She thought we just fought in world war eleven.
~ Joan Rivers
They described the strange feeling of peace that came over them when they handled the Book of the Machine, the pleasure that it was to repeat certain numerals out of it, however little meaning those numerals conveyed to the outward ear, the ecstasy of touching a button, however unimportant, or of ringing an electric bell, however superfluously.
~ E.M. Forster
She doesn't understand the concept of Roman numerals. She thought we just fought in world war eleven.
~ Joan Rivers
Numbers are a bad idea for names because people won't know whether to use numerals (123) or to spell out the number (One Two Three).
~ Guy Kawasaki
This is a toga I wear when I teach them Roman numerals.
~ Susan Wiggs
The numerals (actually Indian in origin) are spreading through the Italian business community. The key to the Hindu-Arabic system is the zero, which permits the position of the digit to indicate its value as unit, ten, hundred, or thousand. Rapid and accurate computation can be done, something difficult with clumsy Roman numbers. The
~ Frances Gies
I II III IV V VI VII VIII IX X 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 XI XII XIII XIV XV XVI XVII XVIII XIX XX 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 XXX XL L LX LXX LXXX XC C D M 30 40 50 60 70 80
~ Kate McMullan
What does it feel like to be latent? I don't know. What does it feel like to be so old that your birth certificate is in Roman numerals?
~ Suzanne Wright
god, love is more strange than numerals more strange than grass on fire more strange than the dead body of a child drowned in the bottom of a tub, we know so little, we know so much, we don't know enough.
~ Charles Bukowski
But when you want to mark a number on an abacus, what do you do if there are no stones in a column? The number 60 is one wedge in the sixties column and no wedges in the ones column. How do you write "no wedges"? The Babylonians needed a placeholder that represented nothing. They had to, in effect, invent zero. And so they created a new character, with no value, to signify an empty column. They denoted it with two slanted wedges.
~ Chris Anderson
Eastern mysticism embraced both the tangible and the intangible, through the yin and yang of duality. The god Shiva was both the creator and the destroyer of worlds; indeed, one aspect of the deity Nishkala Shiva was the Shiva "without parts"—the void. Through their ability to divorce numerals from physical reality, the Indians invented algebra.
~ Chris Anderson
February is pitiless, and it is boring. That parade of red numerals on its page adds up to zero: birthdays of politicians, a holiday reserved for rodents, what kind of celebrations are those? The only bubble in the flat champagne of February is Valentine's Day. It was no accident that our ancestors pinned Valentine's Day on February's shirt: he or she lucky enough to have a lover in frigid, antsy February has cause for celebration, indeed.
~ Tom Robbins
Seated each afternoon in the darkened screening room, Halliday came to recognise the targeted numerals of the Academy leader as sigils preceding the dream state of a film.
~ William Gibson
The numerals 666 are most often identified with the Beast of Revelation, but they are also symbolic of the fact that we live in a carbon-based universe.  An atom of carbon features six protons, six neutrons and six electrons.  In other words, this universe we live in is coded in 666 by the very nature of what it is.
~ Unknown
There are 10 kinds of people in the world: those who understand binary numerals, and those who don't.
~ Ian Stewart
The system of positional notation we use derives from the Hindus; however, the same scheme was used two milleniums earlier by the Babylonians, but to a more limited extent because they did not have a zero.
~ Morris Kline