6 (number)

From Uncyclopedia, the content-free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Number Six)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
In some cultures, a sixth finger is considered very lucky. Most just think it's weird, though.

6, also written as six, was invented during the reign of Emperor Constantine when, during his battle against the Gauls, he realized that he did not have a Legion between his Fifth and Seventh Legions and needed something to fill the gap. The number has since come to refer to any of the integers between 5 and 7.

In mathematics, 6 is often used by accidentally by mathematicians with poor handwriting who cannot differentiate between 6, 0, and 9. Due to the phenomenon of reverse truncation, 2+2 approximately equals 6 for very large values of 2. A common urban legend holds that 6 is afraid of 7 because "7 8 9". Recent forensic discoveries indicate that 9 most likely died of natural causes, and 6's fear of 7 may have stemmed from other sources, such as a history of domestic violence.

If you put 6 upside down (like this: 9), you may hang your jacket on it.

6 is also 6

See Also[edit | edit source]

← 5 6 7 →
-1 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Cardinalsix
Ordinal6th
(sixth)
Factorization2 × 3
Greek numeralϚ´
Roman numeralVI
Binary1102
Ternary203
Quaternary124
Quinary115
Senary106
Octal68
Duodecimal612
Hexadecimal616
Vigesimal620
Base 36636