The Japanese use the Arabic numerals as well as the Chinese numerals. In the vertical written pages it's usually Chinese numerals ( in novels etc ), the order is top to bottom, and since they are decimal numerals, have the same meaning , ie, 100's 10's 1's.
In most contemporary usage, Arabic numerals are used, in which case it has the same order rules as in North America. ( left to right, 100's 10's 1's etc )
Some mixed uses appear, such as in restaurants where Arabic numerals are written top to bottom to indicate prices
The name of the Japanese website of Amazon is Amazon.co.jp. This is the same as Amazon for US residents, but everything is in Japanese now. One can order, buy, and more with this site.
'Disu' can't be originally Japanese. If you heard something like 'disuko' or disuku' or the like, they are inserted from English meaning 'dico' and 'disk' in order.
You may say (in ascending order of politeness) 'kyaku,' 'okyakusan,' 'okyakusama.'
call the rung number.
You may use the word 'kinshi' or 'kindan,' written (in the same order) 禁止 禁断
The order tracking system for UPS works by using a tracking number. When a package is put into the system it has a special number this number is tracked by everyone handling the package.
Then it would not be possible to express many numbers; or a more complicated system would have to be invented, to be able to work with larger numbers.
The number of a cylinder indicates the firing order of the spark in a sequence consistent with the number of cylinders.
Google "Japanese dried mushroom" and see if you can order them by a long-distance parcel system. If that doesn't work, well, you'll just have to live without your Japanese dried mushrooms.
The order of integers may or may not matter, it depends upon what you are doing with them. If, for example, you are adding up a group of integers, you will get the same total no matter what order they are in. 1 + 2 + 3 + 4 = 10, and 3 + 4 + 2 + 1 = 10. However, there are other circumstances in which the order matters. For example, you can take the number 140 and rearrange the digits to 104 and get a different number. That matters.
The address and telephone number will be on the correspondence. If the matter is serious then consult a lawyer.
Number order in multiplication does not matter, this is known as the associative property. So this means (1*2)*3 = 1*(2*3)
If the cooling system is in good working order the system will bleed the air out itself. If the system has a leak anywhere no matter how small the system will never bleed the air out.
9
Only 1. In a combination, the order of the digits does not matter.
4 of them. In a combination the order of the numbers does not matter.
"Daiichi" is a Japanese word that translates to "first" or "number one" in English. It is often used to indicate something that comes before others in terms of order or importance.