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ChatterBank8 mins ago
Almost every culture on Earth uses Arabic numerals (0 - 9). While in Cairo I noticed the plates on cars and buttons on phones, they are not Arabic numerals.
I asked a driver, he laughed and said the entire world uses Arabic numerals except the Arab nations !!!.
Why does Arabia not use the numerals they invented ???
No best answer has yet been selected by Sauron. 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.'Arabic' is probably a misnomer for what were originally 'Indian' numerals. Click http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/history/HistTopics/Arabic_numerals.html
for a website with more information. Once there, you might click on the blue links for more background.
The Arabic numeral system has used many different sets of glyphs (carvings or characters). These glyph sets can be divided into two main families the West Arabic numerals, and the East Arabic numerals.
East Arabic numerals are Arabic-Indic (the ones on the number plates). East Arabic-Indic is a variety of East Arabic numerals. West Arabic numerals are labelled European (the ones we use).
Most historians agree that the Arab numerals were first conceived of in India (particularly as Arabs themselves call the numerals they use �Indian numerals�, arqam hindiyyah), and was then transmitted to the Islamic world and thence, via North Africa and Spain, to Europe (mainly by Fabonacci aka Leonardo of Pisa - an Italian mathematician).
Our numbering follows a combination of various numbering patterns (or glyphs) including Arabic-Indic (indoa), Eastern Arabic-Indic (Persian/Urdu), Devanagari (Hindi) and Tamil.