88 (number)

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88 (eighty-eight) is the natural number following 87 and preceding 89.

88
Cardinal eighty-eight
Ordinal 88th
(eighty-eighth)
Numeral system 88
Factorization  2^3 \cdot 11
Divisors 1, 2, 4, 8, 11, 22, 44, 88
Roman numeral LXXXVIII
Binary 10110002
Octal 1308
Duodecimal 7412
Hexadecimal 5816

Contents

[edit] In mathematics

Eighty-Eight is a refactorable number, a primitive semiperfect number and an untouchable number. It is also an hexadecagonal number.

Since it is possible to find sequences of 88 consecutive integers such that each inner member member shares a factor with either the first or the last member, 88 is an Erdős–Woods number.

In base 10, it is a palindromic number and a repdigit.

[edit] In astronomy and space exploration

[edit] Cultural significance

[edit] In Chinese culture

Number 88 symbolizes fortune and good luck in Chinese culture, since the word 8 sounds similar to the word Fā (发, which implies 发财, or wealth, in Mandarin). The number 8 is considered to be the luckiest number in Chinese culture, and prices in Chinese supermarkets often contain many 8s. The shape of the Chinese character for 8 (八) implies that a person will have a great, wide future as the character starts narrow and gets wider toward the bottom. The Chinese government has been auctioning auto license plates containing many 8s for tens of thousands of dollars. The 2008 Beijing Olympics opened on 8/8/08 at 8 p.m.[1] 88 is often used to mean "bye bye" in Chinese-language chats, text messages, SMSs and IMs. 88 is pronounced in Chinese Mandarin language as "ba ba" ("bā bā" to be precise), simulating the sound of the English language "bye bye".

[edit] In Amateur Radio

88 is used as shorthand for 'hugs and kisses' when signing a message in Amateur (ham) Radio. It is used in spoken word (radiotelephony) morse code (radiotelegraphy) and in various digital modes. It is considered rather more intimate than '73', which (roughly) means 'best regards', and therefore 73 is more often used. The two may be used together. Sometimes the 88 or 73 is pluralized by appending an s, which is incorrect.[2] These number codes are at least a century old.[citation needed]

[edit] As a Neo-Nazi symbol

Neo-Nazis use the number 88 as a code to represent the slogan Heil Hitler.[3] The letter H is eighth in the alphabet, so 88 is meant to stand for HH. The number is sometimes used in combination with the number 14 (e.g. 1488 or 14/88). In this context, the number 14 stands for the "Fourteen Words", which is a white nationalist slogan created by convicted terrorist David Lane. Examples of usage include: the song "88 rock'n'roll band" by the neo-Nazi band Landser, and the names of the groups Column 88, Unit 88, White Legion 88 and Barselc88. Holocaust museum shooter James von Brunn often signed his writings as "JVB-88." Hungarian far-right party Jobbik often uses the number 88. The party's program for the 2010 elections was published on 88 pages.[4] The phone number of the party headquaters is (+36 1) 365 14 88.[5] The number 14 is also a popular neo-nazi symbol, referencing the fourteen words of a slogan by David Lane.

[edit] In sports

[edit] In other fields

Seven-segment 8.svgSeven-segment 8.svg

Eighty-eight is also:

  • the model number of the Oldsmobile 88 automobile and the AGM-88 HARM missile
  • the QBU-88 (or Type 88) Chinese sniper rifle
  • the number of the French department Vosges
  • the designation of two freeways named Interstate 88, one in Illinois and another in New York
  • the town of Eighty Eight, Kentucky
  • used
    • in Japanese, often used to mean "a great many" or "countless"; numbers such as eighteen, eighty, eighty thousand, eight-hundred, eighty thousand, and the like can bear the same connotation
    • in Chinese SMS or chat, short for "byebye", from the Mandarin pronunciation "ba1 ba1" (8 - 8)
    • in US Citizen's Band and Amateur ("ham") radio slang, short for "love and kisses"; origin unknown.
    • in hip hop, where "88" stands for "HH," short for "hip hop"
  • in Kill Bill, the name of O-Ren Ishii's Army, the Crazy 88
  • the ISBN Group Identifier for books published in Italy and Switzerland
  • in miles per hour, the speed that the DeLorean automobile must attain in order to travel in time, in the Back to the Future trilogy
  • in the TV series Black Books (Series 2, Episode 2: "Fever"), the temperature (presumably in Fahrenheit) above which Manny's case of Dave's Syndrome will trigger, supposedly a parody of the similar use of the number 88 in the Back to the Future trilogy
  • "the number of the Anti-Terrorist" in the documents submitted to NBC by Seung-Hui Cho prior to the Virginia Tech massacre on 16 April 2007 [1]
  • the number of an anti-terrorist police squad, called "Detachment 88", set up by the Indonesian government following the 2002 Bali bombings which killed 202 people, including 88 Australians
  • Used to say "kisses and hugs" among morse code and amateur radio users, as it resembles an image of two lips kissing
  • Tanner '88, Garry Trudeau's HBO series on the fictional campaign of Congressman Jack Tanner in his bid for the White House
  • 88 Minutes, a 2008 film starring Al Pacino
  • The Cambridge Z88 was a 1988 portable computer
  • 88open was an industry standards group in '88 created by Motorola to standardize Unix systems
  • An '88-level' is a named condition in the COBOL programming language
  • The House on East 88th Street, a book by Bernard Waber
  • 88-Keys, an American record producer and rapper
  • in Texas hold 'em poker, the pocket pair 88 is referred to as the "Snowmen"
  • 88 is the name of a gang in the 2006 American film Gridiron Gang starring Dwayne Johnson
  • In the United States Navy, 88 is slang for the word "what". For example, "88 are you doing tonight?"
  • Two genera of butterflies (Diaethria and Callicore) are called Eighty-eights because markings on their wings look like the number 88.
  • The German 8.8 cm FlaK 18/36/37/41 anti-aircraft gun used in WWII was often referred to colloquially as an "88" (acht-acht in German)

[edit] See also

[edit] References

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