πŸ”— Kaktovik numerals – A base-20 number system that is visually easy too

πŸ”— Numbers πŸ”— Canada πŸ”— Arctic πŸ”— Writing systems πŸ”— Indigenous peoples of North America πŸ”— Canada/Canadian Territories πŸ”— Alaska

Kaktovik numerals are a featural positional numeral system created by Alaskan IΓ±upiat.

Arabic numeral notation, which was designed for a base-10 numeral system, is inadequate for the Inuit languages, which use a base-20 numeral system. Students in Kaktovik, Alaska, invented a base-20 numeral notation in 1994 to rectify this issue, and this system spread among the Alaskan IΓ±upiat and has been considered in other countries where Inuit languages are spoken.

The image at right shows the digits 0 to 19. Twenty is written as a one and a zero (\Ι€), forty as a two and a zero (VΙ€), four hundred as a one and two zeros (\Ι€Ι€), eight hundred as a two and two zeros (VΙ€Ι€), etc.

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