Hundred (unit)
The long hundred, also known as the great hundred or twelfty, is the number 120 (in base-10 Arabic numerals) that was referred to as "hundred" in Germanic languages prior to the 15th century, and is now known as one hundred twenty, or six score. The number was simply described as hundred and translated into Latin in Germanic-speaking countries as (Roman numeral C), but the qualifier "long" is now added because English now uses the word "hundred" exclusively to refer to the number of five score (100) instead. The long hundred was 120, but the long thousand was reckoned decimally as 10 long hundreds (1200). English unit The hundred ( la, centena) was an English unit of measurement used in the production, sale and taxation of various items in the medieval kingdom of England. The value was often different from 100 units, mostly because of the continued medieval use of the Germanic long hundred of 120. The unit's use as a measure of weight is now described as a hundredweight. The ... [...More Info...]       [...Related Items...]     OR:     [Wikipedia]   [Google]   [Baidu]   |
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120 (number) 120, read as one hundred ndtwenty, is the natural number following 119 and preceding 121. In the Germanic languages, the number 120 was also formerly known as "one hundred". This "hundred" of six score is now obsolete, but is described as the long hundred or great hundred in historical contexts. In mathematics 120 is * the factorial of 5 i.e. 5 × 4 × 3 × 2 × 1 * the fifteenth triangular number, as well as the sum of the first eight triangular numbers, making it also a tetrahedral number. 120 is the smallest number to appear six times in Pascal's triangle (as all triangular and tetragonal numbers appear in it). Because 15 is also triangular, 120 is a doubly triangular number. 120 is divisible by the first 5 triangular numbers and the first 4 tetrahedral numbers. It is the eighth hexagonal number. * highly composite, superior highly composite, superabundant, and colossally abundant number, with its 16 divisors being more than any number lower than it has, and it i ... |