Arabic-Indic digit tool
252 in Arabic Numerals
This page shows 252 in Arabic numerals as a palindrome, with the same digit pattern preserved in Arabic-script digits.
Quick Answer
252 in Arabic numerals is ٢٥٢.
252 is a 3-digit number in the hundreds range, with 0 zeros and digit sum 9.
Result
٢٥٢
252 in Eastern Arabic numerals is ٢٥٢.
252 in Arabic Numerals: Number Details
The clean page for 252 records the exact digit-symbol conversion and a few facts about the number, so it can stand on its own instead of repeating the generic converter page. In Arabic numerals, 252 is written as ٢٥٢. The numeric value does not change; the page only changes the glyphs used for the digits.
252 is a 3-digit number. Its digit sum is 9, the last digit is 2, and the number is even. In place-value terms, the digits break down as 2 hundreds, 5 tens, and 2 ones. This is why the converted form keeps the same digit order even when the surrounding Arabic text direction is right to left.
| Western digits | 252 |
|---|---|
| Arabic numerals | ٢٥٢ |
| Persian / Urdu comparison | ۲۵۲ |
| Unicode block used | U+0660 through U+0669 |
| Place-value note | The digits break down as 2 hundreds, 5 tens, and 2 ones |
| Nearby clean pages | 251 in Arabic numerals 253 in Arabic numerals |
Palindrome Digit Pattern
252 is a palindrome because its digit pattern reads the same forward and backward. The converted form ٢٥٢ preserves the same order; it should not be reversed manually in Arabic text.
252 is useful for palindrome examples, digit-order checks, copyable number labels, and showing that the same pattern is preserved after conversion.
| Western digit | Eastern Arabic | Persian / Urdu | Position | Unicode |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 | ٢ | ۲ | hundreds | U+0662 / U+06F2 |
| 5 | ٥ | ۵ | tens | U+0665 / U+06F5 |
| 2 | ٢ | ۲ | ones | U+0662 / U+06F2 |
Practice with 252
Why is 252 a palindrome?
How to Read 252 in Arabic Numerals
252 is written as ٢٥٢ in Arabic numerals. The conversion is symbol-for-symbol: 2 becomes the first Arabic-script digit, 2 becomes the final Arabic-script digit, and every position between them keeps its original place value. The page does not translate 252 into Arabic words; it shows the digit form that can be copied into a number, date, label, classroom note, or reference table.
Number Pattern for 252
This value is a 3-digit number in the hundreds range. It has 0 zero digits and 3 non-zero digits. The digit sum is 9, so the quick arithmetic profile of the number is different from nearby pages such as 251 and 253. In compact notation, 252 can be described as a 3-digit value in the hundreds range.
Place Value and Direction
In place-value terms, the digits break down as 2 hundreds, 5 tens, and 2 ones. That structure is why the converted form stays in the same mathematical order. Arabic writing direction can affect surrounding text, but a multi-digit number such as ٢٥٢ should not be manually reversed. The leftmost digit still represents the largest place, and the rightmost digit still represents the ones place.
Arabic Numerals Compared with the Other Arabic-Script Style
This page is using U+0660 through U+0669. The alternate Arabic-script version of 252 is ۲۵۲. Both forms represent the same value, but the code points differ, which matters for fonts, search, copy and paste, spreadsheets, and web pages. Use the current result when you need Arabic numerals, and use the comparison value only when the target text expects the other Arabic-script digit set.
252 Arabic Numerals FAQ
What is 252 in Arabic numerals?
252 in Arabic numerals is ٢٥٢. The number keeps the same value and the same digit order.
What is 252 in the other Arabic-script digit style?
The comparison form is ۲۵۲. Both forms represent 252, but they use different Unicode digit ranges.
Is 252 a palindrome?
Yes. 252 reads the same forward and backward, and the Arabic-script digit form preserves that pattern.
Should I reverse ٢٥٢ in Arabic text?
No. Keep the same place-value order. The palindrome pattern already reads the same both ways.
Which Unicode digits are used for 252?
٢٥٢ uses U+0660 through U+0669 for this Arabic numerals version.