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Ask HN: Why is it difficult to recite the alphabet backwards, but not numbers?

2 pointsby asynchronyseabout 2 years ago

3 comments

anonymouskimmerabout 2 years ago
Just my 2 cents.<p>Numbers are used in a sequential manner naturally, and more importantly we subtract numbers from each other all the time. Basically, we have practice. Try reciting the major irrational numbers numerically backward. Until you&#x27;ve practiced, you might find it easier reciting them alphabetically backward.<p>I&#x27;m sure for children reciting numbers backward is about as difficult as reciting the first 10 letters of the alphabet backward.<p>To become facile with reciting the alphabet backward, I was taught to &quot;chunk it&quot; into small groups. ZYXW - VUTS - RQ - PON - MLK - JIHG - FED - CBA. I can now recite it backward almost as easily as forward, without chunking, even if I start in the middle and not the end. The only part I still sometimes get caught on is the order of I and H.
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devsdaabout 2 years ago
I would say practice but I think there&#x27;s more to it.<p>For some initial numbers one might rely on memory but after a certain value we &quot;calculate&quot; the value and then its name automatically from small set of names for each part of a number&#x27;s value.<p>In the case of alphabets there is no obvious sequence of alphabet in both directions. We might as well learn the alphabet in qwerty order without impacting its utility.<p>So, its difficult to recite the alphabet in any order other than the ones we memorized.
yuppie_scumabout 2 years ago
The alphabet is base-26