Count by 1939


Here we will show you how to count by 1939, discuss counting by 1939 patterns, and tell you why knowing how to count by 1939 matters. To start off, note that Count by 1939 means counting in 1939s, or count by one thousand nine hundred thirty-nines, and it is also called skip counting by 1939.

How to count by 1939
Normally, we would count by 1 like this: 1, 2, 3, 4, etc., but when we count by 1939, we count 1939, 3878, 5817, 7756, and so on.

In other words, to count in intervals of 1939 or skip counting by 1939, we start with 1939 and then add 1939 to get the next number, and then continue adding 1939 to the previous number to keep counting by 1939, like this:

1939
1939 + 1939 = 3878
3878 + 1939 = 5817
5817 + 1939 = 7756
7756 + 1939 = 9695
...

You can of course skip count by 1939 forever, so it is impossible to make a list of all numbers, but below is a Count by 1939 Chart of the first 100 numbers to get you started.

Count by 1939 chart

Looking at the chart above, you will see that the first column has the first ten numbers you get when you skip count by 1939, the second column has the next ten numbers you get when you skip count by 1939, and so forth.


Count by 1939 Patterns
We organized the Skip Counting by 1939s Chart above in 10 rows and 10 columns so you can easily identify patterns.

Skip counting always creates patterns. Figuring out these patterns may help you if want to count by 1939, but don't have the Counting by 1939s Chart above. Obviously, one pattern with counting by 1939s is that the number increases by 1939.

Furthermore, if you look at each row above, each number in the row has the same last digit (ones place). That means that every tenth number has the same last digit.

If you look down the columns, you will see that the last digit (ones place) repeats itself in blocks of 10 over and over. The pattern of the last digit when you count by 1939 goes 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, 0 and 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, 0 and so on for as long as you count by 1939.


Why Count by 1939?
We think that understanding and learning about skip counting by 1939 is important, because it teaches you how the arithmetic operations fit together. Below are some examples of what we mean.

When you count by one thousand nine hundred thirty-nine, you are also creating a list of multiples of 1939 that you can use in math when you need the least common multiple. 1939 times n equals the nth multiple or skip count of 1939.

When you skip count by 1939, you are also creating a list of numbers that 1939 is divisible by. On top of that, skip counting by 1939 is the same as making the 1939 times table.

Skip Counting
Need to skip count by another number? Enter another number for us to skip count for you.




Count by 1940
Here is the next number on our list that we used to skip count.


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