See also: [U+1881 MONGOLIAN LETTER ALI GALI VISARGA ONE] and [U+1011 MYANMAR LETTER THA]

U+221E, ∞
INFINITY

[U+221D]
Mathematical Operators
[U+221F]

Translingual

Alternative forms

Early forms (e.g. in Euler's texts) may approach a 'lazy S', . It has also been attributed to John Wallis and conjectured to originate from its use as a Roman numeral, a way of writing , since 1,000 was hyperbolically used to represent very large numbers.[1][2]

Symbol

  1. (mathematics) Infinity.
    ∞ + ∞ = ∞

Usage notes

In English, this symbol is called the "infinity symbol". It is also called a lemniscate and a "lazy eight".

Derived terms

See also

References

  1. ^ David Eugene Smith (1925) “Reading and writing numbers”, in History of Mathematics: Special topics of elementary mathematics[1], page 58
  2. ^ John H. Conway, Richard K. Guy (2012) The Book of Numbers[2], page 19