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For general writing, most guides agree that you should use words for the numbers one through nine, but for larger numbers the rules vary wildly from style guide to style guide. Some say to use words for the numbers one to one hundred, one to ten, any word that can be written with one or two words, and so on.
In non-technical academic writing, write in words the number for approximate figures (including fractions) and for full, half and quarter-hour times. Use digits (e.g. counted 3968 books on the shelves). Rounded and large amounts (e.g. 98 dollars; $15 million). Centigrade; 6 cm or 6 centimeters).
In non-technical academic writing, write in words the number for approximate figures (including fractions) and for full, half and quarter-hour times. Use digits (e.g. counted 3968 books on the shelves). Rounded and large amounts (e.g. 98 dollars; $15 million). Centigrade; 6 cm or 6 centimeters).
For general writing, most guides agree that you should use words for the numbers one through nine, but for larger numbers the rules vary wildly from style guide to style guide. Some say to use words for the numbers one to one hundred, one to ten, any word that can be written with one or two words, and so on.
101: one hundred and one (NOT: one hundred one) 102: one hundred and two (NOT: one hundred two) 175: one hundred and seventy-five (NOT: one hundred seventy-five) 200: two hundred. 300: three hundred. 512: five hundred and twelve (NOT: five hundred twelve)
LARGE NUMBERS: When large numbers must be spelled out, use a hyphen to connect a word ending in y to another word; do not use commas between other separate words that are part of one number: twenty; thirty; twenty-one; thirty-one; one hundred forty-three; one thousand one hundred fifty-five; one million two hundred ...
Spell out numbers that begin a sentence: But: My parents have been married for 50 years. Always use figures for ages; dates and clock times; money; percentages; dimensions and weight; and temperatures: Will all children ages 712 please line up in the hallway.
For general writing, most guides agree that you should use words for the numbers one through nine, but for larger numbers the rules vary wildly from style guide to style guide. Some say to use words for the numbers one to one hundred, one to ten, any word that can be written with one or two words, and so on.
Rule 1. Spell out all numbers beginning a sentence. ... Rule 2a. Hyphenate all compound numbers from twenty-one through ninety-nine. ... Rule 2b. Hyphenate all written-out fractions. ... Rule 3a. With figures of four or more digits, use commas. ... Rule 3b. ... Rule 3c. ... Rule 4a. ... Rule 4b.
The Chicago Manual of Style, The Blue book and the ALD Guide to Legal Citation all suggest spelling out numbers from zero to ninety-nine. ... Style manuals do agree that you shouldn't mix and match spelled-out number words (e.g., eleven) and numerals (e.g., 12) in the same sentence or paragraph.
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