Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Indian numbering system

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The Indian numbering system is used in India as well as in Bangladesh, Nepal and Pakistan. It is based on the Vedic numbering system in which numbers over 9,999 are written in two-digit groups (or a mix of two- and three-digit groups) rather than the three-digit groups used in most other parts of the world. In Pakistan, this system is used in Urdu and other regional language media, but not in English-language media.

Contents

The terms lakh or lac (100,000 or 1,00,000 in the Indian system) and crore (10,000,000 or 1,00,00,000 in the Indian system) are used in Indian English to express large numbers. For example, in India 150,000 rupees becomes 1.5 lakh rupees, written as 1,50,000 or INR 1,50,000, while 30,000,000 (thirty million) rupees becomes 3 crore rupees, written as 3,00,00,000 with commas at the thousand, lakh, and crore levels, and 1,000,000,000 (one billion) rupees (one hundred crore rupees) is written 1,00,00,00,000.

Use of separators

The Indian numbering system uses separators differently from the international norm; in such numbers of at least one lakh (one hundred thousand), a comma divides every two rather than every three digits to the left of the last three, thus:

This accords with the Indian numbering system, which has units for thousands, hundreds of thousands, tens of millions, etc.

Names of numbers

The table below follows the short scale usage of one billion being one thousand million. In India, Bangladesh and Pakistan, following former British usage, the long scale was used, with one billion equivalent to one million million.

Vedic numbering systems

There are various systems of numeration found in various ancient Vedic literatures of India. The following table gives one such system used in the Valmiki Ramayana.

Usage in different languages

  • In Punjabi, a lakh is called lakkh (Shahmukhi: لکھ, Gurmukhi: ਲੱਖ) and a crore is called karoṛ (Shahmukhi: کروڑ, Gurmukhi: ਕਰੋੜ).
  • In Bengali, a lakh is called লক্ষ lokkho (ardha-tatsama), or laakh (tadbhava) and a crore is called কোটি koti.
  • In Gujarati, a lakh is called લાખ lākh and a crore is called કરોડ karoḍ. A hundred crore is called અબજ abaj.
  • In Sylheti, a lakh is called লাখ lakh (lax) and a crore is called কোটি kuti.
  • In Kannada, a lakh is called ಲಕ್ಷ lakṣha and a crore is called ಕೋಟಿ kōṭi.
  • In Malayalam, a lakh is called ലക്ഷം laksham and a crore is called കോടി kodi.
  • In Marathi, a lakh is called लाख lākh and a crore is called कोटी koṭi or करोड karoḍ , and an arab (109) is called अब्ज abja.
  • In Nepali, a lakh is called लाख lākh and a crore is called करोड karoḍ.
  • In Odia, a lakh is called ଲକ୍ଷ lakhya and a crore is called କୋଟି koti.
  • In Sinhalese, a lakh is called ලක්ෂ lakṣa and a crore is called කෝටි kōṭi.
  • In Tamil, a lakh is called நூறாயிரம் nooRaayiram as well as இலட்சம் 'ilatcham and a crore is called கோடி kodi.
  • In Telugu, a lakh is called లక్ష lakṣa and a crore is called కోటి kōṭi.
  • In Urdu, a lakh is called لاکھ lākh and a crore is called کروڑ karoṛ.
  • Lakh has entered the Swahili language as "laki" and is in common use.
  • In Burmese, crore is called ကုဋေ [ɡədè]. Lakh is used in Burmese English.
  • References

    Indian numbering system Wikipedia