4

I have 1210.802 units in a mutual fund. How do I write it in words?

"One thousand two hundred and ten..." How do I write the decimal units here?

RegDwigнt
  • 97,231
The King
  • 143
  • 1
    "One thousand two hundred and ten" ... that "and" is British-speak, often omitted in the US. – GEdgar Mar 01 '12 at 01:38

4 Answers4

5

And the numbers afterwards are individual:

One thousand two hundred and ten point eight oh two.

But, as per @Barrie, why? I can think of no case where this would be necessary or appropriate.

  • And it risks confusion to do so. – Barrie England Feb 29 '12 at 09:16
  • I need to fill up a form wherein I have to mention the number of units in numbers and words. – The King Feb 29 '12 at 09:16
  • The conventional rule in writing is that once a number passes two digits, we write it as Hindu-Arabic digits and not in words. But if a form requires you to write it in words, then I guess that's what you have to do. They probably want you to write it both ways as a double-check against errors: If the two agree, that's a good sign, if not, then one or the other or both are mistakes and they'll have to check back with you to correct it. – Jay Mar 27 '12 at 15:15
2

When you are writing the values on a check, say for $193.34, when writing it in words it is customarily done as:

One hundred ninety three and 34/100

Perhaps for your numbers you would use the same convention. For 1210.802, you would write:

One thousand two hundred ten and 802/1000

1

Normally, you wouldn’t. In speech, you say the decimal point as ‘point’.

Barrie England
  • 140,205
  • I need to fill up a form wherein I have to mention the number of units in numbers and words. – The King Feb 29 '12 at 09:17
  • @The King: You could write ‘one thousand, two hundred and ten and eight hundred and two thousandths units’, perhaps followed by the number in brackets, but it looks very odd. – Barrie England Feb 29 '12 at 10:03
  • In the US, seeing those three "and"s in there might look strange. But he did say "fill up a form" so I assume he is not from the US. – GEdgar Mar 01 '12 at 01:41
0

I wonder: if you must complete the form using words, is it necessary to include the fractional part? One could say:

  • I own approximately twelve hundred and ten shares.

or,

  • I have just over one thousand, two hundred and ten units.

If you must be absolutely precise, though, you might use:

  • One thousand, two hundred and ten units, plus eight hundred and two thousandths of a unit.

My goodness, though! After you write such a monstrosity, do what Barrie suggested, and put the number in parentheses.

J.R.
  • 58,828
  • 5
  • 95
  • 196
  • 1
    Hmm, whether it's "necessary" to include the fractional part surely depends on the context. If each share is worth $10,000, I don't think I'd want to just forget about the fractional share. Well, maybe if I had ten million dollars another eight thousand would seem like pocket change. Sadly, I'm unlikely to ever know. – Jay Mar 27 '12 at 15:13