10 Rules For Writing Numbers

10 Rules For Writing Numbers

A Lesson by Laura Maidah
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This lesson lists ten rules to embed numerals and written numbers into your writing.

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1. Number versus numeral. First, what is the difference between a number and a numeral? “Four,” “4″ and “IV” are all symbols used to express the same number (or the concept of “fourness”). 

2. Spell small numbers out. The small numbers, such as whole numbers smaller than ten, should be spelled out. That’s one rule you can count on. If you don’t spell numbers out it will look like you’re sending an instant message, and you want to be more formal than that in your writing.

3. No other standard rule: Experts don’t always agree on other rules. Some experts say that any one-word number should be written out. Two-word numbers should be expressed in figures. That is, they say you should write out twelve or twenty. But not 24.

4.Using the comma. In English, the comma is used as a thousands separator (and the period as a decimal separator), to make large numbers easier to read. So write the size of Alaska as 571,951 square miles instead of 571951 square miles. In Continental Europe the opposite is true, periods are used to separate large numbers and the comma is used for decimals. Finally, the International Systems of Units (SI) recommends that a space should be used to separate groups of three digits, and both the comma and the period should be used only to denote decimals, like $13 200,50 (the comma part is a mess… I know).

5. Don’t start a sentence with a numeral. Make it “Fourscore and seven years ago,” not “4 score and 7 years ago.” That means you might have to rewrite some sentences: “Fans bought 400,000 copies the first day” instead of “400,000 copies were sold the first day.”

6. Centuries and decades should be spelled out. Use the Eighties ornineteenth century.

7. Percentages and recipes. With everyday writing and recipes you can use digits, like “4% of the children” or “Add 2 cups of brown rice.” In formal writing, however, you should spell the percentage out like “12 percent of the players” (or “twelve percent of the players,” depending on your preference as explained in point three).

8. If the number is rounded or estimated, spell it out. Rounded numbers over a million are written as a numeral plus a word. Use “About 400 million people speak Spanish natively,” instead of “About 400,000,000 people speak Spanish natively.” If you’re using the exact number, you’d write it out, of course.

9. Two numbers next to each other. It can be confusing if you write “7 13-year-olds”, so write one of them as a numeral, like “seven 13-year-olds”. Pick the number that has the fewest letters.

10. Ordinal numbers and consistency. Don’t say “He was my 1st true love,” but rather “He was my first true love.” Be consistent within the same sentence. If my teacher has 23 beginning students, she also has 18 advanced students, not eighteen advanced students.


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Comments

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Posted 11 Years Ago


Thank you... I will be putting this in my library for later reference.

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Posted 11 Years Ago


Very informative
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Posted 11 Years Ago


Thank you helped a lot.

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Posted 12 Years Ago


It is difficult to identify whether one should take a bottle of scotch or a Dr Seuss video if you were invited to a party for twenty five year olds.
Twenty 5 year olds..... Seuss
25 year olds....... Scotch
20 five year olds..... Seuss
twenty-five year olds..... Scotch
or panic there may be a large number of nappy (diaper) wearing babies ... for which there is only one cure .... Scotch
but that should have read twenty-five year old children.... A change from noun to adjective. "Oh boy, I need a drink" said the Cat in the Hat!

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Posted 12 Years Ago


Sooo helpful

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Posted 12 Years Ago


This helped a lot thanks

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Author

Laura Maidah
Laura Maidah

Arcadia, CA



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