- Scan QR code
- UTF-16LE
- UTF-32LE
- US-ASCII
- ISO-8859-1 (Latin-1)
- ISO-8859-15 (Latin-9)
- Windows-1252
- ISO-8859-2 (Latin-2)
- Windows-1250
- ISO-8859-3 (Latin-3)
- ISO-8859-4 (Latin-4)
- ISO-8859-13 (Latin-7)
- Windows-1257
- Shift_JIS
- EUC-JP
- ISO-2022-JP (JIS)
- GB2312 (EUC-CN)
- GB18030
- Big5-HKSCS
- EUC-KR (KS X 1001)
- ISO-2022-KR
- ISO-8859-5
- Windows-1251
- KOI8-R
- KOI8-U
- ISO-8859-6
- Windows-1256
- ISO-8859-7
- Windows-1253
- ISO-8859-8
- Windows-1255
- ISO-8859-9 (Latin-5)
- Windows-1254
- TIS-620
- Windows-874
- Windows-1258
Decoded
Num from Kanji |
---|
Encoded
Num to Kanji | |
---|---|
Num to Kanji Daiji |
About Japanese numerals
Numerical values are represented by Japanese numerals. There are two types of Japanese numerals, one used in modern Japan and the other used in the old font called Daiji.
The following are examples of modern and old Japanese numerals.
Numbers | Japanese numerals (Modern font) | Japanese numerals (Old font; Daiji) |
---|---|---|
1234 | 千二百三十四 | 壱阡弐陌参拾肆 |
12345.67890 | 一万二千三百四十五・六七八九〇 | 壱萬弐阡参陌肆拾伍・陸漆捌玖零 |
1234567890 | 十二億三千四百五十六万七千八百九十 | 壱拾弐億参阡肆陌伍拾陸萬漆阡捌陌玖拾 |
500000000000000000 (5 * 1017) | 五十京 | 伍拾京 |
In Japanese numerals, numbers from 0 to 9 are represented by the following Chinese characters.
Numbers | Japanese numerals (Modern font) | Japanese numerals (Old font; Daiji) |
---|---|---|
0 | 〇 | 零 |
1 | 一 | 壱 |
2 | 二 | 弐 |
3 | 三 | 参 |
4 | 四 | 肆 |
5 | 五 | 伍 |
6 | 六 | 陸 |
7 | 七 | 漆 |
8 | 八 | 捌 |
9 | 九 | 玖 |
Numbers 10 and above are represented by the following characters for each digit. In Japanese numerals, the digit name is carried up every 4 digits. This is called "Manshin" ("万進" in Japanese).
Digits | Japanese numerals (Modern font) | Japanese numerals (Old font; Daiji) |
---|---|---|
101 | 十 | 拾 |
102 | 百 | 陌 |
103 | 千 | 阡 |
104 | 万 | 萬 |
108 | 億 | |
1012 | 兆 | |
1016 | 京 | |
1020 | 垓 | |
1024 | 秭 | |
1028 | 穣 | |
1032 | 溝 | |
1036 | 澗 | |
1040 | 正 | |
1044 | 載 | |
1048 | 極 | |
1052 | 恒河沙 | |
1056 | 阿僧祇 | |
1060 | 那由他 | |
1064 | 不可思議 | |
1068 | 無量大数 |
For 10, 100 and 1000, it is common to omit "一" like "十", "百" and "千" instead of "一十", "一十" and "一千" respectively. However, in the case of Daiji, "壱" may be specified.
The numbers after the decimal point are expressed in scaled number system after "・".
Of the above Daiji, Japanese law only stipulates "壱", "弐", "参", and "拾".
In Daiji, digits of "億" (108) or more are not defined, but in DenCode, they are represented by the same digit name as modern Japanese numerals.