12 (number)


12 is the natural number following 11 and preceding 13.
Twelve is the 3rd superior highly composite number, the 3rd colossally abundant number, the 5th highly composite number, and is divisible by the numbers from 1 to 4, and 6, a large number of divisors comparatively.
It is central to many systems of timekeeping, including the Western calendar and units of time of day, and frequently appears in the world's major religions.

Name

Twelve is the largest number with a single-syllable name in English. Early Germanic numbers have been theorized to have been non-decimal: evidence includes the unusual phrasing of eleven and twelve, the former use of "hundred" to refer to groups of 120, and the presence of glosses such as "tentywise" or "ten-count" in medieval texts showing that writers could not presume their readers would normally understand them that way. Such uses gradually disappeared with the introduction of Arabic numerals during the 12th-century Renaissance.
Derived from Old English, twelf and tuelf are first attested in the 10th-century Lindisfarne Gospels' Book of John. It has cognates in every Germanic language, whose Proto-Germanic ancestor has been reconstructed as twaliƀi..., from twa and suffix -lif- or -liƀ- of uncertain meaning. It is sometimes compared with the Lithuanian dvýlika, although -lika is used as the suffix for all numbers from 11 to 19. Every other Indo-European language instead uses a form of "two"+"ten", such as the Latin duōdecim. The usual ordinal form is "twelfth" but "dozenth" or "duodecimal" is also used in some contexts, particularly base-12 numeration. Similarly, a group of twelve things is usually a "dozen" but may also be referred to as a "dodecad" or "duodecad". The adjective referring to a group of twelve is "duodecuple".
As with eleven, the earliest forms of twelve are often considered to be connected with Proto-Germanic liƀan or liƀan, with the implicit meaning that "two is left" after having already counted to ten. The Lithuanian suffix is also considered to share a similar development. The suffix -lif- has also been connected with reconstructions of the Proto-Germanic for ten.
As mentioned above, 12 has its own name in Germanic languages such as English, Dutch, German, and Swedish, all derived from Old French dozaine. It is a compound number in many other languages, e.g. Italian dodici, Japanese 十二 jūni.

Written representation

In prose writing, twelve, being the last single-syllable numeral, is sometimes taken as the last number to be written as a word, and 13 the first to be written using digits.
This is not a binding rule, and in English language tradition, it is sometimes recommended to spell out numbers up to and including either nine, ten or twelve, or even ninety-nine or one hundred. Another system spells out all numbers written in one or two words.
In German orthography, there used to be the widely followed rule of spelling out numbers up to twelve. The Duden mentions this rule as outdated.

In mathematics

Properties

12 is a composite number, the smallest abundant number, a semiperfect number, a highly composite number, a refactorable number, and a Pell number. It is the smallest of two known sublime numbers, numbers that have a perfect number of divisors whose sum is also perfect.
There are twelve Jacobian elliptic functions and twelve cubic distance-transitive graphs.

Shapes

A twelve-sided polygon is a dodecagon. In its regular form, it is the largest polygon that can uniformly tile the plane alongside other regular polygons, as with the truncated hexagonal tiling or the truncated trihexagonal tiling.
A regular dodecahedron has twelve pentagonal faces. Regular cubes and octahedrons both have 12 edges, while regular icosahedrons have 12 vertices.
The cubic close packing and hexagonal close packing, which are the two densest possible sphere packings in three-dimensional space, both have each sphere touching twelve other spheres. Twelve is also the kissing number in three dimensions.
There are twelve complex apeirotopes in dimensions five and higher, which include van Oss polytopes in the form of complex -orthoplexes. There are also twelve paracompact hyperbolic Coxeter groups of uniform polytopes in five-dimensional space.
Bring's curve is a Riemann surface of genus four, with a domain that is a regular hyperbolic 20-sided icosagon. By the Gauss-Bonnet theorem, the area of this fundamental polygon is equal to.

Functions

Twelve is the smallest weight for which a cusp form exists. This cusp form is the discriminant whose Fourier coefficients are given by the Ramanujan -function and which is the 24th power of the Dedekind eta function:
This fact is related to a constellation of interesting appearances of the number twelve in mathematics ranging from the fact that the abelianization of special linear group has twelve elements, to the value of the Riemann zeta function at being, which stems from the Ramanujan summation
Although the series is divergent, methods such as Ramanujan summation can assign finite values to divergent series.

List of basic calculations

Multiplication12345678910111213141516171819202122232425501001000
12 × x1224364860728496108120132144156168180192204216228240252264276288300600120012000

Division12345678910111213141516
12 ÷ x126432.421.1.51.1.21.10.0.0.80.75
x ÷ 120.080.10.250.0.410.50.580.0.750.80.9111.081.11.251.

Exponentiation123456789101112
12121441728207362488322985984358318084299816965159780352619173642247430083706888916100448256
x140965314411677721624414062521767823361384128720168719476736282429536481100000000000031384283767218916100448256

In other bases

The duodecimal system, which is the use of 12 as a division factor for many ancient and medieval weights and measures, including hours, probably originates from Mesopotamia.

Religion

The number twelve carries religious, mythological and magical symbolism; since antiquity, the number has generally represented perfection, entirety, or cosmic order.

Judaism and Christianity

The number 12 is notable within the Hebrew Bible, and in Christianity:
Ishmaelthe first-born son of Abrahamhas 12 sons/princes, and Jacob also has 12 sons, who are the progenitors of the Twelve Tribes of Israel. This is reflected in Christian tradition, notably in the twelve Apostles. When Judas Iscariot is disgraced, a meeting is held to add Saint Matthias to complete the number twelve once more.
The Old Testament contains Twelve Minor Prophets.
The Book of Revelation contains much numerical symbolism, and many of the numbers mentioned have 12 as a divisor. mentions a woman—interpreted as the people of Israel, the Church and the Virgin Mary—wearing a crown of twelve stars. Furthermore, there are 12,000 people sealed from each of the twelve tribes of Israel, making a total of 144,000.

Islam

Astrology

Timekeeping

In numeral systems

۱۲Arabic១២KhmerԺԲArmenian
১২BanglaΔΙΙAttic Greek?Maya
יבHebrewV20-Z1-Z1Egyptian--
१२Indian and Nepali 十二Chinese and Japanese--
௧௨TamilXIIRoman and Etruscan--
๑๒ThaiIIXChuvash--
౧౨Telugu and Kannada١٢Urdu--
ιβʹIonian Greek൧൨Malayalam--

In science

In sports

In technology

Music

Music theory

Art theory

  • There are twelve basic hues in the color wheel: three primary colors, three secondary colors and six tertiary colors.

In other fields

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