#Ancient numbers in different languages how to#
So here it is, after hours upon hours of searching and research, this is how to say I love you in different languages – to be exact the 100 most spoken languages in the world! It’s amazing to think that through all of the years, wars, and our existence as human beings – one thing remains, our method of communicating using language and our ability to love.Īs Valentine’s Day quickly approaches, I started to wonder, how do people say ‘I love you’ around the world? I already knew it in French, Spanish, German, Mandarin, Korean, and English of course, but what about the other languages of the world? There’s always an expression or a word that doesn’t exist in other languages, or seems special based on the collective mentality of that particular culture.
![ancient numbers in different languages ancient numbers in different languages](http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-oFqTuOZeJCY/UOZoGQENU6I/AAAAAAAAG_A/ngn3UAKQ6FE/s1600/AlphabetGame.jpg)
It’s amazing how much you can learn about a culture based on how they express themselves. Will you guess how to write a number in full? Enter a number and try to write it down in your head, or maybe on a piece of paper, before displaying the result.One of the coolest things about traveling the world is learning a little bit of the local language. Let’s move now to the practice of the numbering rules in Arabic.
![ancient numbers in different languages ancient numbers in different languages](https://i.pinimg.com/736x/2f/36/78/2f36780be44d1bdb1be5760c18eaca9c--brahmi-script-malay-language.jpg)
![ancient numbers in different languages ancient numbers in different languages](http://www.geez.org/Numerals/images/NumberTable2-cropped.gif)
Two thousand is using the dual form of thousand: alfain ( أَلْفَيْنِ). The word for thousand is alf ( أَلْفٌ).Above twenty-one, compound numbers are formed by stating the unit then the ten, linked with the and word connector ( wa-, وَ).Now that you’ve had a gist of the most useful numbers, let’s move to the writing rules for the tens, the compound numbers, and why not the hundreds, the thousands and beyond (if possible).