4.1 Day II: Additive, Multiplicative and Ciphered Systems of Numeration By the end of class you will be able to convert numbers among Hindu-Arabic, Chinese.

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4.1 Day II: Additive, Multiplicative and Ciphered Systems of Numeration By the end of class you will be able to convert numbers among Hindu-Arabic, Chinese and Greek

Some Chinese Examples: =63 So What Do You Notice?? =725

Chinese Numeration System: Read from bottom up Group numbers in 2: top number is multiplied by bottom number which is a power of 10 The bottom number is the units digit (not multiplied by anything Need to add zeros if they appear consecutively in the middle of the number 11-19 not written as powers of 10

Examples of Special Rules: =9001 =16

Conversions 1) 3) 577 2) 4) 703

Iconic Greek System Ciphered System: there are numerals for numbers up to the base, and numerals for multiples of the base (multiples of 10 in this case) Uses Greek letters of alphabet Has a multiplicative property: place I as a superscript in front of a number to multiply by 1000

Write in Hindu Arabic 1) 2) 3) 4)

Write in Greek 1) 285 2) 311 3) 1012

Summarizer 1) Create a 4-foldable with labels “Egyptian”, “Roman”, “Chinese” “Greek” 2) Write a different numeral in each box 3) Your partner will convert the numerals to Hindu-Arabic, and write a fact about each numeration system 4) Check your partner’s work