number.wiki

Numerals around the world

Published · By NumberWiki

Category Numeral systems

The digits 0–9 you're reading aren't the only living decimal numerals. More than a billion people write numbers every day in Devanagari, Arabic, Thai, Bengali, Tamil, and other scripts. These are the same base-10 place-value system we use — only the shapes of the ten digits differ. They are, quite literally, our digits' cousins.

One system, many glyphs

Almost every modern numeral script descends from the Brahmi numerals of ancient India, where the place-value system with a true zero took its mature form around the middle of the first millennium CE. From there it branched two ways: eastward and southward into the scripts of South and Southeast Asia, and westward through Arabic into Europe — which is why the digits in this paragraph and the digits on an Indian banknote are siblings, not strangers.

Because they all share the place-value design, the arithmetic is identical: each position is worth ten times the one to its right, and a zero glyph holds an empty place. Only the ten symbols change. Today every one of these scripts coexists with the Western "Arabic" digits, used interchangeably depending on context, language, and formality.

"Arabic" numerals, East and West

A point of frequent confusion: the digits 0–9 used across Europe and the Americas are called Western Arabic (or Hindu-Arabic) numerals, because Europe learned them from the medieval Arab world. But the Arabic-speaking world itself largely writes Eastern Arabic numerals — ٠ ١ ٢ ٣ ٤ ٥ ٦ ٧ ٨ ٩ — a visually distinct set. Both are "Arabic numerals"; they simply diverged into eastern and western forms. Even within the Eastern set there are regional variants (the Persian and Urdu forms of 4, 5, and 6 differ from the standard Arabic ones).

The digits 0–9 in each script

Each row shows that script's ten digits, in order from 0 to 9.

Script Digits 0–9
Eastern Arabic العربية الشرقية ٠١٢٣٤٥٦٧٨٩
Devanagari देवनागरी ०१२३४५६७८९
Bengali বাংলা ০১২৩৪৫৬৭৮৯
Tamil தமிழ் ௦௧௨௩௪௫௬௭௮௯
Thai ไทย ๐๑๒๓๔๕๖๗๘๙
Tibetan བོད་ཡིག ༠༡༢༣༤༥༦༧༨༩
Khmer ខ្មែរ ០១២៣៤៥៦៧៨៩
Lao ລາວ ໐໑໒໓໔໕໖໗໘໙
Burmese မြန်မာ ၀၁၂၃၄၅၆၇၈၉

A quick tour

The same numbers across the scripts

A few numbers rendered in all nine scripts. Each heading number links to its page; the order matches the table above (Eastern Arabic, Devanagari, Bengali, Tamil, Thai, Tibetan, Khmer, Lao, Burmese).

0 ٠ · ० · ০ · ௦ · ๐ · ༠ · ០ · ໐ · ၀
7 ٧ · ७ · ৭ · ௭ · ๗ · ༧ · ៧ · ໗ · ၇
42 ٤٢ · ४२ · ৪২ · ௪௨ · ๔๒ · ༤༢ · ៤២ · ໔໒ · ၄၂
108 ١٠٨ · १०८ · ১০৮ · ௧௦௮ · ๑๐๘ · ༡༠༨ · ១០៨ · ໑໐໘ · ၁၀၈
786 ٧٨٦ · ७८६ · ৭৮৬ · ௭௮௬ · ๗๘๖ · ༧༨༦ · ៧៨៦ · ໗໘໖ · ၇၈၆
2 026 ٢٠٢٦ · २०२६ · ২০২৬ · ௨௦௨௬ · ๒๐๒๖ · ༢༠༢༦ · ២០២៦ · ໒໐໒໖ · ၂၀၂၆
100 000 ١٠٠٠٠٠ · १००००० · ১০০০০০ · ௧௦௦௦௦௦ · ๑๐๐๐๐๐ · ༡༠༠༠༠༠ · ១០០០០០ · ໑໐໐໐໐໐ · ၁၀၀၀၀၀

On this site

Every number page on NumberWiki shows its value in all nine of these scripts, in the "In other modern scripts" strip of the Historical numeral systems section — so you can look up any number and read it in Devanagari, Thai, or Eastern Arabic at a glance.

Further reading

See also