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Should I write numbers in words or as numerals when there are multiple next to each other?



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4















I hope this is not off-topic:



How do you write things like this: The machine was tested in 5 3-players games, 2 4-players games...



Or: five 3-players games, two 4-players games...



I want to say e.g. that it was tested 5 times in games of 3 players, and so on.










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Daniel Duque is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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  • How to represent numbers in text is largely a matter of style. Adhere to the discipline of your editor, publication, or organization, or in the absence of a house style, adopt a style manual appropriate to your audience and tastes and be consistent in its application.

    – choster
    3 hours ago


















4















I hope this is not off-topic:



How do you write things like this: The machine was tested in 5 3-players games, 2 4-players games...



Or: five 3-players games, two 4-players games...



I want to say e.g. that it was tested 5 times in games of 3 players, and so on.










share|improve this question









New contributor




Daniel Duque is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





















  • How to represent numbers in text is largely a matter of style. Adhere to the discipline of your editor, publication, or organization, or in the absence of a house style, adopt a style manual appropriate to your audience and tastes and be consistent in its application.

    – choster
    3 hours ago














4












4








4








I hope this is not off-topic:



How do you write things like this: The machine was tested in 5 3-players games, 2 4-players games...



Or: five 3-players games, two 4-players games...



I want to say e.g. that it was tested 5 times in games of 3 players, and so on.










share|improve this question









New contributor




Daniel Duque is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












I hope this is not off-topic:



How do you write things like this: The machine was tested in 5 3-players games, 2 4-players games...



Or: five 3-players games, two 4-players games...



I want to say e.g. that it was tested 5 times in games of 3 players, and so on.







phrases punctuation syntactic-analysis






share|improve this question









New contributor




Daniel Duque is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




Daniel Duque is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 2 hours ago









Solomon Ucko

1055




1055






New contributor




Daniel Duque is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked 9 hours ago









Daniel DuqueDaniel Duque

233




233




New contributor




Daniel Duque is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





Daniel Duque is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Daniel Duque is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.













  • How to represent numbers in text is largely a matter of style. Adhere to the discipline of your editor, publication, or organization, or in the absence of a house style, adopt a style manual appropriate to your audience and tastes and be consistent in its application.

    – choster
    3 hours ago



















  • How to represent numbers in text is largely a matter of style. Adhere to the discipline of your editor, publication, or organization, or in the absence of a house style, adopt a style manual appropriate to your audience and tastes and be consistent in its application.

    – choster
    3 hours ago

















How to represent numbers in text is largely a matter of style. Adhere to the discipline of your editor, publication, or organization, or in the absence of a house style, adopt a style manual appropriate to your audience and tastes and be consistent in its application.

– choster
3 hours ago





How to represent numbers in text is largely a matter of style. Adhere to the discipline of your editor, publication, or organization, or in the absence of a house style, adopt a style manual appropriate to your audience and tastes and be consistent in its application.

– choster
3 hours ago










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















9














Style guides usually allow for you to alternate numerals and text when you are writing about two kinds of numbers in the same sentence. APA 6th edition, 4.33 ("Combining Numerals and Words to Express Numbers") gives this case:




Use a combination of numerals and words to express back-to-back numbers.



2 two-way interactions



ten 7-point scales




It recommends spelling out both in text only if readability would be impeded otherwise.



In this paradigm, you could write "five 3-player games" or "5 three-player games." The former is perhaps preferable, as it never leads to a formation where you start a sentence with a number.





The Chicago Manual of Style has a similar recommendation. In 9.7 on "Consistency and flexibility" in numeral rules:




In the same sentence or paragraph, however, items in one category may be given as numerals and items in another spelled out. ...



A mixture of buildings—one of 103 stories, five of more than 50, and a dozen of only 3 or 4—has been suggested for the area.




So Chicago, too, allows the author to make decisions about what category of number to make a numeral and which one to spell out.






share|improve this answer



















  • 4





    @DanielDuque- also note this answer’s use of singular “player” in 3-player, etc.

    – Jim
    7 hours ago





















2














According to The Chicago Manual of Style, it's "...five three-player games, two four-player games, ..."






share|improve this answer



















  • 1





    While that is the general rule, Chicago also allows for combining spelled and numerical forms. See section 9.7.

    – TaliesinMerlin
    8 hours ago












Your Answer








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2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









9














Style guides usually allow for you to alternate numerals and text when you are writing about two kinds of numbers in the same sentence. APA 6th edition, 4.33 ("Combining Numerals and Words to Express Numbers") gives this case:




Use a combination of numerals and words to express back-to-back numbers.



2 two-way interactions



ten 7-point scales




It recommends spelling out both in text only if readability would be impeded otherwise.



In this paradigm, you could write "five 3-player games" or "5 three-player games." The former is perhaps preferable, as it never leads to a formation where you start a sentence with a number.





The Chicago Manual of Style has a similar recommendation. In 9.7 on "Consistency and flexibility" in numeral rules:




In the same sentence or paragraph, however, items in one category may be given as numerals and items in another spelled out. ...



A mixture of buildings—one of 103 stories, five of more than 50, and a dozen of only 3 or 4—has been suggested for the area.




So Chicago, too, allows the author to make decisions about what category of number to make a numeral and which one to spell out.






share|improve this answer



















  • 4





    @DanielDuque- also note this answer’s use of singular “player” in 3-player, etc.

    – Jim
    7 hours ago


















9














Style guides usually allow for you to alternate numerals and text when you are writing about two kinds of numbers in the same sentence. APA 6th edition, 4.33 ("Combining Numerals and Words to Express Numbers") gives this case:




Use a combination of numerals and words to express back-to-back numbers.



2 two-way interactions



ten 7-point scales




It recommends spelling out both in text only if readability would be impeded otherwise.



In this paradigm, you could write "five 3-player games" or "5 three-player games." The former is perhaps preferable, as it never leads to a formation where you start a sentence with a number.





The Chicago Manual of Style has a similar recommendation. In 9.7 on "Consistency and flexibility" in numeral rules:




In the same sentence or paragraph, however, items in one category may be given as numerals and items in another spelled out. ...



A mixture of buildings—one of 103 stories, five of more than 50, and a dozen of only 3 or 4—has been suggested for the area.




So Chicago, too, allows the author to make decisions about what category of number to make a numeral and which one to spell out.






share|improve this answer



















  • 4





    @DanielDuque- also note this answer’s use of singular “player” in 3-player, etc.

    – Jim
    7 hours ago
















9












9








9







Style guides usually allow for you to alternate numerals and text when you are writing about two kinds of numbers in the same sentence. APA 6th edition, 4.33 ("Combining Numerals and Words to Express Numbers") gives this case:




Use a combination of numerals and words to express back-to-back numbers.



2 two-way interactions



ten 7-point scales




It recommends spelling out both in text only if readability would be impeded otherwise.



In this paradigm, you could write "five 3-player games" or "5 three-player games." The former is perhaps preferable, as it never leads to a formation where you start a sentence with a number.





The Chicago Manual of Style has a similar recommendation. In 9.7 on "Consistency and flexibility" in numeral rules:




In the same sentence or paragraph, however, items in one category may be given as numerals and items in another spelled out. ...



A mixture of buildings—one of 103 stories, five of more than 50, and a dozen of only 3 or 4—has been suggested for the area.




So Chicago, too, allows the author to make decisions about what category of number to make a numeral and which one to spell out.






share|improve this answer













Style guides usually allow for you to alternate numerals and text when you are writing about two kinds of numbers in the same sentence. APA 6th edition, 4.33 ("Combining Numerals and Words to Express Numbers") gives this case:




Use a combination of numerals and words to express back-to-back numbers.



2 two-way interactions



ten 7-point scales




It recommends spelling out both in text only if readability would be impeded otherwise.



In this paradigm, you could write "five 3-player games" or "5 three-player games." The former is perhaps preferable, as it never leads to a formation where you start a sentence with a number.





The Chicago Manual of Style has a similar recommendation. In 9.7 on "Consistency and flexibility" in numeral rules:




In the same sentence or paragraph, however, items in one category may be given as numerals and items in another spelled out. ...



A mixture of buildings—one of 103 stories, five of more than 50, and a dozen of only 3 or 4—has been suggested for the area.




So Chicago, too, allows the author to make decisions about what category of number to make a numeral and which one to spell out.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 8 hours ago









TaliesinMerlinTaliesinMerlin

7,1151430




7,1151430








  • 4





    @DanielDuque- also note this answer’s use of singular “player” in 3-player, etc.

    – Jim
    7 hours ago
















  • 4





    @DanielDuque- also note this answer’s use of singular “player” in 3-player, etc.

    – Jim
    7 hours ago










4




4





@DanielDuque- also note this answer’s use of singular “player” in 3-player, etc.

– Jim
7 hours ago







@DanielDuque- also note this answer’s use of singular “player” in 3-player, etc.

– Jim
7 hours ago















2














According to The Chicago Manual of Style, it's "...five three-player games, two four-player games, ..."






share|improve this answer



















  • 1





    While that is the general rule, Chicago also allows for combining spelled and numerical forms. See section 9.7.

    – TaliesinMerlin
    8 hours ago
















2














According to The Chicago Manual of Style, it's "...five three-player games, two four-player games, ..."






share|improve this answer



















  • 1





    While that is the general rule, Chicago also allows for combining spelled and numerical forms. See section 9.7.

    – TaliesinMerlin
    8 hours ago














2












2








2







According to The Chicago Manual of Style, it's "...five three-player games, two four-player games, ..."






share|improve this answer













According to The Chicago Manual of Style, it's "...five three-player games, two four-player games, ..."







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 8 hours ago









Ken MohnkernKen Mohnkern

22615




22615








  • 1





    While that is the general rule, Chicago also allows for combining spelled and numerical forms. See section 9.7.

    – TaliesinMerlin
    8 hours ago














  • 1





    While that is the general rule, Chicago also allows for combining spelled and numerical forms. See section 9.7.

    – TaliesinMerlin
    8 hours ago








1




1





While that is the general rule, Chicago also allows for combining spelled and numerical forms. See section 9.7.

– TaliesinMerlin
8 hours ago





While that is the general rule, Chicago also allows for combining spelled and numerical forms. See section 9.7.

– TaliesinMerlin
8 hours ago










Daniel Duque is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.










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