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Latest comment: 8 years ago18 comments10 people in discussion
We hardly need these. Besides, the translations seem to be for 110 in both entries, except in the case Hungarian which a user kindly fixed. --Hekaheka (talk) 18:52, 14 May 2016 (UTC)Reply
Unstriking. Someone may want to delete this; admitted, people are busy creating the dictionary. These are sum of parts entries; the question is, do we make an exception for numbers and how high can the numbers be? --Dan Polansky (talk) 07:16, 16 July 2016 (UTC)Reply
Delete. This has to stop somewhere. I am ok with some sum of parts terms to show the compound number word construction but having the full set from 100 to 199 and beyond seems an overkill to me, and in any case, these are SOP so there is a CFI-based rationale for deletion. I have notified the anon at User talk:126.111.39.122. --Dan Polansky (talk) 07:32, 16 July 2016 (UTC)Reply
Comment: Aren't these SoPs anyway? fourhundredandtwelve, or any other number in the hundreds. Although, I don't know where my stance is on these, because there are a lot of languages it can translate to where their words are not SoP. Philmonte101 (talk) 05:58, 17 July 2016 (UTC)Reply
Redirect all numbers over one hundred to an appendix describing how names of numbers are formed by stating the number of thousands, then the number of hundreds, then the numbers of tens and ones. bd2412T19:39, 20 July 2016 (UTC)Reply