33
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33
Summary
33 is a positive integer[1]. 33 ranks in the top 6% of positive_integer entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (307 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- 33's instance of is recorded as positive integer[3].
- 33's instance of is recorded as odd number[4].
- 33's instance of is recorded as centered dodecahedral number[5].
- 33's instance of is recorded as dodecagonal number[6].
- 33's instance of is recorded as repdigit[7].
- 33's instance of is recorded as composite number[8].
- 33's instance of is recorded as palindromic number[9].
- 33's Commons category is recorded as 33 (number)[10].
- 33's Unicode character is recorded as ㉝[11].
- 33's topic's main category is recorded as Category:33 (number)[12].
- 33's numeric value is recorded as {'amount': '+33'}[13].
- 33's code is recorded as ௩௰௩[14].
- 33's code is recorded as ௩௩[15].
- 33's code is recorded as XXXIII[16].
- 33's code is recorded as 𒌍𒐗[17].
- 33's code is recorded as 100001[18].
- 33's code is recorded as 1020[19].
- 33's code is recorded as 201[20].
- 33's code is recorded as 113[21].
- 33's code is recorded as 53[22].
- 33's code is recorded as 45[23].
- 33's code is recorded as 36[24].
- 33's code is recorded as 41[25].
- 33's code is recorded as 33[26].
- 33's code is recorded as 30[27].
Body
Definition and Type
Recorded instance of include positive integer[3], odd number[4], centered dodecahedral number[5], dodecagonal number[6], repdigit[7], and composite number[8].
Influence
Things named for 33 include Sanjūsangen-dō Temple[28], a Buddhist temple[29], in Japan[30], founded in 1165[31].
Why It Matters
33 ranks in the top 6% of positive_integer entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (307 views/month).[2] 33 has Wikipedia articles in 29 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[32] 33 is known by 46 alternative names across languages and contexts.[33]
Entities named for 33 include Sanjūsangen-dō Temple[28], a Buddhist temple[29], in Japan[30], founded in 1165[31].