Decimal System
/ˈdɛs.ɪ.məl ˈsɪs.təm/
noun — “the number system that humans insist on using because ten fingers are convenient.”
Octal Numerals
/ˈɒk.təl ˈnjuː.mə.rəlz/
noun — “the number system that counts in eights, like the quirky cousin of binary and hexadecimal.”
Hexadecimal Numerals
/ˌhɛk.səˈdɛ.sɪ.məl ˈnjuː.mə.rəlz/
noun — “the base-16 number system that makes long binary strings look like a stylish shortcut.”
Binary Numerals
/ˈbaɪ.nɛr ˈnjuː.mə.rəlz/
noun — “the number system that thinks in ones and zeros so your computer doesn’t have to.”
Binary Numerals are a numeric system that uses only two digits—0 and 1—to represent all numbers. This base-2 system is the foundation of modern digital computing because electronic circuits naturally have two states: off and on. Every file, program, or computation inside a computer ultimately reduces to a long sequence of binary digits, making this system invisible yet absolutely essential in the modern world.
Arabic Numerals
/ˈær.ə.bɪk ˈnjuː.mə.rəlz/
noun — “the number system that quietly took over the world because it’s just that good.”
Roman Numerals
/ˈroʊ.mən ˈnjuː.mə.rəlz/
noun — “the number system that makes clocks look fancy and history lessons slightly painful.”
Cistercian Numerals
/ˌsɪs.tərˈsi.ən ˈnjuː.mə.rəlz/
noun — “the medieval number system that fits an entire number into a single, mysterious glyph.”
Canonical
/kəˈnɒn.ɪ.kəl/
adjective — “the official uniform of a dataset or expression — neat, standardized, and ready for inspection.”
Initialism
/ɪˈnɪʃ.əl.ɪ.zəm/
noun — “the cousin of acronyms that refuses to be spoken as a word — it insists on spelling itself out, letter by letter.”
Acronym
/ˈæk.rə.nɪm/
noun — “the lazy typist’s dream: squeezing a mouthful of words into a handful of letters.”