Search: id:A002810 Results 1-1 of 1 results found. %I A002810 M4341 N1818 %S A002810 1,7,11,27,77,107,111,127,177,777,1127,1177,1777,7777,11777,27777, %T A002810 77777,107777,111777,127777,177777,777777,1127777,1177777,1777777,7777777 %N A002810 Smallest number requiring n syllables in English. %C A002810 This sequence uses British English as opposed to American English. a(6) = 6 since "one hundred and seven" has six syllables. - njas, Nov 24 2009 %D A002810 Rodolfo Kurchan, Mesmerizing Math. Puzzles, by Sterling Publications, page 18. %D A002810 N. J. A. Sloane, A Handbook of Integer Sequences, Academic Press, 1973 (includes this sequence). %D A002810 N. J. A. Sloane and Simon Plouffe, The Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences, Academic Press, 1995 (includes this sequence). %H A002810 Robert G. Wilson v, English names for the numbers from 0 to 11159 without spaces or hyphens . %e A002810 One has one syllable, seven has two syllables, etc.. a(3)=11 because eleven has 3 syllables %Y A002810 Cf. A045736. %Y A002810 Sequence in context: A002643 A039287 A045222 this_sequence A045736 A158807 A067006 %Y A002810 Adjacent sequences: A002807 A002808 A002809 this_sequence A002811 A002812 A002813 %K A002810 word,nonn,new %O A002810 1,2 %A A002810 N. J. A. Sloane (njas(AT)research.att.com). Search completed in 0.001 seconds