ChatterBank50 mins ago
Numbers And Words
21 Answers
What is correct:
I bought four apples.
or
I bought 4 apples.
Are there rules governing which is correct?
I bought four apples.
or
I bought 4 apples.
Are there rules governing which is correct?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by sp1814. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The following is extracted from Hart's Rules, which is the authority according to Fowler's Modern English Usage as regards the writing of numbers...
"Numbers should be in words if less than 100 and if not within a specific reference, measurement, date, list or table or part of statistical data generally (e.g. the tenth century; a late-tenth-century manuscript; on twenty-six occasions). Otherwise they should be in figures."
So, page 26 is a specific reference...16 feet is a measurement...October 13th is a date...3 is the third heading in a list starting from 1...12 deaths in every 100 is statistical data and all of these should be in figures, not words. Otherwise, they should be written out as words as per the example, "on twenty-six occasions" suggested above.
"Numbers should be in words if less than 100 and if not within a specific reference, measurement, date, list or table or part of statistical data generally (e.g. the tenth century; a late-tenth-century manuscript; on twenty-six occasions). Otherwise they should be in figures."
So, page 26 is a specific reference...16 feet is a measurement...October 13th is a date...3 is the third heading in a list starting from 1...12 deaths in every 100 is statistical data and all of these should be in figures, not words. Otherwise, they should be written out as words as per the example, "on twenty-six occasions" suggested above.
I agree with Quizmonster's summary except, despite what Fowler said, thought the generally accepted rule was to use words for smaller numbers (such as four) and digits for larger numbers (with something like 13 being the first such number I recall). (There's no real logic for that particular cut-off point but clearly words such as twenty three are unwieldy.)
This may help.
http:// www.ox. ac.uk/p ublic_a ffairs/ service s_and_r esource s/style _guide/ numbers .html
There's also a Chicago style guide that's often quoted
http://
There's also a Chicago style guide that's often quoted
Guardian style guide:
Spell out from one to nine; numerals from 10 to 999,999; thereafter use m, bn or tn for sums of money, quantities or inanimate objects in copy, eg 5m tonnes of coal, 30bn doses of vaccine, £50tn; but million or billion for people or animals, eg 1 million people, 25 million rabbits, the world population is 7 billion, etc; in headlines always use m, bn or tn
Spell out from one to nine; numerals from 10 to 999,999; thereafter use m, bn or tn for sums of money, quantities or inanimate objects in copy, eg 5m tonnes of coal, 30bn doses of vaccine, £50tn; but million or billion for people or animals, eg 1 million people, 25 million rabbits, the world population is 7 billion, etc; in headlines always use m, bn or tn