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TYJ Decimals and fractions in Japanese

This article is in the series Teach Yourself Japanese

5.4. Decimals and fractions

5.4.1. Decimals

The Chinese invented decimals thousands of years ago, and decimals have been commoner than fractions in East Asia for a long time, while fractions had been more commonly used in the West since Mesopotamian Civilization.

The way to read decimals (しょうすう "syô") in Japanese is similar to English. The decimal delimiter in Japanese is a period (not Japanese period but European period). To read decimals in Japanese, read the integer part first. Then say てん "ten", which is the Japanese word for point, and say plain digit names after that. Omitting zero before a decimal point is not allowed in Japanese.

The euphonic change rule is applied for the word てん, so number 1.3 should be pronounced as い
ってんさん "itten san".

There is a detailed rule to make pronunciation rhythmical. You can skip this part. The digit immediately before a decimal point is paired with the decimal point, and the digits after the decimal point are paired every two digits. In those pairs, the digit 2 is pronounced as not に "ni" but にー "", and the digit 5 is pronounced as not ご "go" but ごー "". These different phonemes guarantee that all digits have two morae, which means the same length of time for each digit, so you have a less chance to misunderstand.

For example, number 22.252 has two pronunciation pairs: '2.' and '25'. So its phoneme becomes にじ
ゅにーてんにーごーに "nizyû ten nî ni". The last digit 2 is not paired, so its phoneme is not affected.

Native Japanese speakers are not aware of the rule, even though they use it. The reason why they read decimals with the rule is that the Japanese language has a strong preference for four-beat rhythm. Making pairs of digits and pronouncing each of them in four morae satisfies the preference. The rule is used not only for decimals but all number sequences as well, such as phone numbers. Also, most colloquial abbreviations of compound words also have four morae. Please remember each mora has the same length of time.

Eight-beat rhythm is preferred as well as four-beat rhythm. You may have heard of はいく "haiku", a Japanese traditional poem style. A haiku contains three phrases, which have five, seven, and five syllables respectively, and one of which has a word related to a season. The first phrase is pronounced with three rests, the second is with one rest, and the third is also with three rests, so they make eight-beat rhythm.

5.4.2. Decimal units

Before the introduction of the English way of writing decimals with a decimal point, the Japanese used decimal units for numbers smaller than one, and some of the units still survive in modern Japanese. They are similar to per cent in English. These are advanced vocabulary, and you don't have to memorise them now.

UnitJapaneseEnglish
10-1わり
wa ri
one tenth
10-2
bu
one hundredth
10-3りん
ri n
one thousandth

Units smaller than 10-3 are not in common use now. Digits before a decimal unit is always pronounced. Look at the examples below:

NumbersDigits and unitsDescriptions
0.11 × 10-1
いちわり
i ti wa ri
Read 1 and the unit.
0.3023 × 10-1 + 0 × 10-2 + 2 × 10-3
さんわり れいぶ にりん
sa n wa ri re i bu ni ri n
Read 1 and the unit.

The unit わり "wari" is a native Japanese word, and the rest are Chinese-origin words. The latter originally meant ten times the current values; the unit ぶ "bu" meant one-tenth, and so on. Later the Chinese-origin units were shifted one-tenth smaller to avoid the conflict with わり, but they sometimes keep the original meaning in idioms, which may be confusing. For instance, the word ごぶごぶ "gobugobu" means fifty-fifty, because the decimal unit ぶ meant one-tenth.

5.4.3. Fractions

Fractions (ぶんすう "bun" in Japanese) are not so commonly used in East Asia as in the West, but it's good to learn how to read them in Japanese here because it's easy. Read the denominator first, then add the suffix ぶんの "bunno", and read the numerator. In short, y ぶんの x means x/y. ぶん "bun" means divide, and の "no" is the genitive marker. For instance, 2/3 is read さんぶんのに "sanbunno ni".
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About author
Takasugi
My name is TAKASUGI Shinji. TAKASUGI is my family name, and Shinji is my given name; a family name is placed before a given name in Japan, as in other Asian nations. My family name is capitalized to avoid misunderstanding.

I have been living in Yokohama since I was born. Yokohama is the second largest city in Japan, which is just 30 kilometers away from the biggest city Tôkyô. It takes 30 minutes to go by train from home to Shibuya, which is the hottest town now in Tôkyô.

I work as a display engineer.

One of my hobbies is creating things with computers; creating programs, computer graphics and web pages is the thing I spent a lot of time doing. I am also interested in a wide range of sciences, and linguistics is my favorite. I like English and I like using it, but my focus is mainly on Japanese, which is my native language. I'm proud of knowing the language, and the difference between English and Japanese has been fascinating me. I have been thinking whether I can introduce it to people outside of Japan. My attempt of introducing Japanese with some Java applets has had more than 1 million visitors.

Comments

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i have difficulties in pronunciation of numbers and decimals in japanese
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