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29 de mar. de 2012 · I've noticed that people coming from English-speaking countries tend to write "1" without the upstroke and "7" without a dash: which differs from the way the numbers are usually written in continental Europe 1: Is there any particular (historical?) reason for this?
The numeral 7: The traditional form found in copperplate penmanship begins with a serif at the upper left and has a wavy horizontal stroke (like a swash). In East Asian countries (Korea, China and Japan), this numeral is commonly written with such a serif, but no swash and no crossbar through the middle.
A European's handwritten numbers look different from ours. The number 1 has an upswing, and the number 4 often looks like a short lightning bolt. If you don't cross your 7, it may be mistaken as a sloppy 1, and you could miss your train.
Dial the International Access Code. Step1 - If you're making an international call out from the US or Canada landline or mobile phone the access code is 011. Alternately, you can enter a + instead of the 011 international access code (do this by pressing and holding the 0 key).
- 1. If you're making an international call out from the US or Canada landline or mobile phone the access code is 011. Alternately, you can enter a +...
- 2. If you are calling from a phone in any European country you must dial 00 as the international access code to call from Europe. If you are dialin...
- 3. Next, dial the country code of the country that you are calling (for example, dial 33 to call France, or 353 to call Italy). These country codes...
- 4. Finally, dial the phone number that you're calling. If the phone number you're calling begins with 0, drop that digit and do not dial it. The ex...
Here are the numerals used in various writing systems from around the world. The numbers section includes numbers in these and many other languages. Some writing systems, such as Greek and Cyrillic, do not have their own set of numerals. They may use letters to represent numbers, and/or use numerals from another writing sytem.
Information about how to count in Portuguese with cardinal and ordinal numbers and notes.
Common European Language - Numbers - Writing of numbers - eubabel.eu - eu-babel.eu