Company members names in numbers
If you assign our names numbers (i.e. a = 1, b = 2, etc.) this is what it would look like. (SPACE equals space between first name and surname; if a letter has a double digit correspondent, followed by a single digit correspondent, the two are nontheless combined together. EXAMPLE: In Sara's name, "Kay" corresponds 11 for K, 1 for A, and 25 for Y. The result is 11125, because they're all put together. This gives the effect that people's numbered names are much longer than their conventional names.)Stephen King: 19205168514 119147
Eve Sorenson: 5225 191518514191514
Kitty Mortland: 119202025 13151820121144
Robert Bouwman: 1815251820 215212313114
Michelle Thompson-Hay: 13938512125 208151316191514-8125
Sara Kay Snider: 191181 11125 191494518
Nick Caruso: 149311 3118221915
Sarah Ballema: 1911818 2112125131
Jenni Cline: 10514149 3129145
BJ Stradley: 210 1920181412525
Dujuan Pritchett: 4211022114 16189203852020
Michael Brooks: 139381512 21815151119
PK Doyle: 1611 41525125
Chris Jacobs: 3818919 101315219
Will Riley: 2391212 18912525

2 Comments:
If you wanted to get into the numerology of it, you'd take any two-digit numbers and add the digits together until you get a single digit, so that the numerical name is the same length as the alphabetical name. For example:
Kitty Mortland = 29227 46923154
And so on.
Sweet jebus, don't let me get sucked into Will's brain!
MK
Yes, but it would be wrong to add. Two numbers next to each other invariably means multiplication, as in
11b = 2(2b+3). It's not 11 +b = 2 + 2+b+3, its 11 x b = 2 x 2 x b +3. Which would still make y, for example, a double digit number, as 2 x 5 equals 10. But you're right, it would cut down the length of a lot of people's names, almost all of them to actual length, even if you did multiply.
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