Some characters in Mating Flight use duodecimal. They are pretty emphatic about it -- they get annoyed when they discover that the natives of the new world have ten fingers because that means the wrong base, kind of thing. Duodecimal is a distinct point of pride with them.
Which means they use it everywhere, and powers of twelve too. Including metaphoric and approximate speech. So they'll say things like "A duodecade or two" not "a decade or two". I'm pretty happy with that.
The higher powers of twelve aren't so nice.
scruff points out
that twelve-cubed is a "great gross", though...
All actual numbers in the book are translated to decimal, by the way. Duodecimal only appears in approximate speech ("a dozen times that" vs. "ten times that"). Plus in multiples of things -- weeks are 12 days long, the dragons want a dozen times something as punative damages, etc. I'm not worried about most of this usage.
[Poll #1151730]
no subject
Date: 2008-03-10 05:05 pm (UTC)Reading the other comments, I think I more or less agree with the ones that say it really shouldn't relate to ten at all. My big problem with great-grosses of years is that it doesn't flow on my tongue, I'm tripping over it. (and i'm the one who sits there and reads my own writing with my huge words in it out loud and have no problem at all, whereas other people complain that I'm too verbose and specific.)
THink of how some words have ended up compressed/conjuncted over years. 'dubduzzen' for double dozen...
just some thoughts