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3 (number)

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This article discusses the number three. For the year AD 3, see 3. For other uses of 3, see 3 (disambiguation)
Cardinal 3
three
Ordinal 3rd
third
Numeral system ternary
Factorization prime
Divisors 1, 3
Roman numeral III
Unicode representation of Roman numeral Ⅲ, ⅲ
prefixes [[Wiktionary:tri->tri-]] (from Greek) [[Wiktionary:tre-|tre-]]/[[Wiktionary:ter-|ter-]] (from Latin)
Binary 11
Octal 3
Duodecimal 3
Hexadecimal 3
Hebrew ג (Gimel)
Arabic ٣

3 (three) is a number, numeral, and glyph. It is the natural number following 2 and preceding 4.

In mathematics

The Arabic glyph

Evolution3glyph.png

Three is often the largest number written with as many lines as the number represents. The Romans tired of writing 4 as IIII, but to this day 3 is written as three lines in Roman and Chinese numerals. This was the way the Brahmin Indians wrote it, and the Gupta made the three lines more curved. The Nagari started rotating the lines clockwise and ending each line with a slight downward stroke on the right. Eventually they made these strokes connect with the lines below, and evolved it to a character that looks very much like a modern 3 with an extra stroke at the bottom. It was the Western Ghubar Arabs who finally eliminated the extra stroke and created our modern 3. (The "extra" stroke, however, was very important to the Eastern Arabs, and they made it much larger, while rotating the strokes above to lie along a horizontal axis, and to this day Eastern Arabs write a 3 that looks like a mirrored 7 with ridges on its top line): ٣

In fonts with text figures, 3 usually has a descender, for example, TextFigs036.png, though in some French fonts it has an ascender instead of a descender.

Pointed version

A common variant of the digit 3 has a pointed top, similar to the character ezh, sometimes used to prevent people from falsifying a 3 into an 8.

In science

Astronomy

In religion

  1. The three Patriarchs: Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob
  2. The three pilgrim festivals (Sheloshet HaRegalim): Passover, Shavuot, and Sukkot
  3. The three leaders of the Jewish nation during their 40 years of wandering in the desert: Moses, Aaron, and Miriam
  4. The Tanakh is comprised of 3 sections: Torah, Nevi'im, and Ketuvim
  5. There are 3 daily prayer services: Shacharit, Mincha, and Maariv
  6. There are three divisions of Jews: Kohen, Levi, and Israel
  7. Shimon Hatzaddik taught: "On three things the world stands: On Torah, on prayer, and on acts of kindness" (Pirkei Avoth 1:2). Rabban Shimon ben Gamliel taught: "The world continues to exist because of three things: justice, truth, and peace" (ibid. 1:18)
  • The three Doshas (weaknesses) and their antidotes are the basis of Ayurvedic medicine in India.
  • The three Gunas underlie action, in the Vedic system of knowledge. There is also the concept of Trimurti in Hindu tradition.
  • The process of synthesis in Hegelian dialectic creates three-ness from two-ness.
  • As a lucky or unlucky number

    Three (三, formal writing: 叁, pinyin san1) is considered a good number in Chinese culture because it sounds like the word "alive" (生 pinyin sheng1), compared to four that sounds like the word "death".

    Counting to three is common in situations where a group of people wish to perform an action in synchrony: Now, on the count of three, everybody pull!  Assuming the counter is proceeding at a uniform rate, the first two counts are necessary to establish the rate, but then everyone can predict when "three" will come based on "one" and "two"; this is likely why three is used instead of some other number.

    Some computer users may use "3" as an alternate to the letter "E", often in jest or to prevent search engines from reading their messages. This form of code is an example of basic Leetspeak.

    Luck, especially bad luck, is often said to "come in threes".

    Most cultures in history have a place for people of third gender.

    In technology

    In music

    In sports

    In other fields

    For other uses and related terms, see also 3 (disambiguation)

    Three is:

    Historical years

    3 A.D., 3 B.C., 1903, 2003, etc.

    External links

     


    From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
    All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.


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