How To: Ordinal Number 282 Written Out in Word Form. Numeral Converted to Words in US American English, Spelled Out in Different Letter Cases
Ordinal number 282 converted and written out in words
Ordinal numbers express the numerical order of some objects in a list, or in a sequence, in relation to the others, for example: 1st first, 2nd second, 3rd third, 4th fourth, 5th fifth... So, the ordinal number shows the position of an object in a list.
Used letter cases: 'lowercase', 'UPPERCASE', 'Title Case', 'Sentence case', 'Start Case', 'camelCase', 'hyphen-case' and 'snake_case'.
Letter case 1 of 8
282nd written out in words in:
lowercase
all lowercase letters:
two hundred eighty-second
Letter case 2 of 8
282nd SPELLED OUT IN:
UPPERCASE
ALL UPPERCASE LETTERS:
TWO HUNDRED EIGHTY-SECOND
Letter case 3 of 8
282nd Converted to words in:
Title Case * (note below)
Capital Letters at the Beginning of the Main Words:
Two Hundred Eighty-Second
Letter case 4 of 8
282nd written out in words in:
Sentence case
Capital letter to start the sentence:
Two hundred eighty-second
Letter case 5 of 8
282nd SPELLED OUT IN:
Start Case
Capital Letters At The Beginning Of All Words:
Two Hundred Eighty-Second
Letter case 6 of 8
282nd Converted to words in:
camelCase
first letter in lower case,
subsequent words' first letters in uppercase
spaces and punctuation removed:
Letter case 7 of 8
282nd written out in words in:
hyphen-case
punctuation - removed
spaces - replaced - by - hyphens:
two-hundred-eighty-second
Letter case 8 of 8
282nd SPELLED OUT IN:
snake_case
punctuation _ removed
spaces _ replaced _ by _ underscores:
two_hundred_eighty_second
Notes on the Letter Cases used to write out in words the number above:
- 1: Lowercase: only lowercase letters are used. Example: 'seventy-six and two tenths'.
- 2: Uppercase: only uppercase letters are used. Example: 'SEVENTY-SIX AND TWO TENTHS'.
- 3. Title Case: the first letters of the words are capitalized, except for certain short words, such as articles, conjunctions and short prepositions, 'a', 'an', 'the', 'and', 'but', 'for', 'at', 'by', 'to', 'or', 'in', etc. Example: 'Seventy-Six and Two Tenths'.
- 4. Sentence case: only the first letter of the first word at the beginning of the sentence is capitalized. Example: 'Seventy-six and two tenths'.
- 5. Start Case: the first letter of each word is capitalized without any exception. Example: 'Seventy-Six And Two Tenths'.
- 6. Camel Case: text has no spaces nor punctuation and the first letter of each word is capitalized except for the very first letter in the series. Example: 'seventySixAndTwoTenths'.
- 7. Hyphen Case: text has no spaces nor punctuation and the words are delimited by hyphen. Example: 'seventy-six-and-two-tenths'. Hyphen Case can be lowercase or uppercase.
- 8. Snake Case: text has no spaces nor punctuation and the words are delimited by underscore. Example: 'seventy_six_and_two_tenths'. Snake Case can be lowercase or uppercase.
General Notes on Writing Out Numbers:
- 1: It's correct to hyphenate all compound numbers from twenty-one (21) through ninety-nine (99). The hyphen is the minus sign, as in 'thirty-four' (34).
- 2: In American English, unlike British English, when writing out natural numbers of three or more digits, the word 'and' is not used after 'hundred' or 'thousand': so it is 'one thousand two hundred thirty-four' and not 'one thousand two hundred and thirty-four'.
- 3. Use commas when writing in digits numbers above 999: 1,234; 43,290, 1,000,000 etc.