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I don't know if you were still wondering about this, or even if you wanted to follow the original calculations as specified by J. Peter Kincaid and his team from 1975, but in the original paper[1] numbers are handled as follows:
For the Flesch-Kincaid Reading Ease score- numbers are counted as one word, and the number of syllables is indeed counted as the word is pronounced, "20" is "twen-ty" for 2 syllables, "1918" is "nineteen eighteen" for 4 syllables.[2]
For the Gunning Fog Index- numbers are considered "easy" words, and get a score of one.[3]
The paper covers a few more details for the calculations, like currency symbols, percent signs, etc.
From Google Code:
Numbers within text numerically (1, 20, 100 etc) may not be handled
correctly.
Currently an unknown - should "20" be counted as two syllables ("twen-ty")
or as one syllable? Or should it be excluded from the calculations?
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