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1 1 10 6: Million Million Million M Mega-2 1 10 9: Billion Thousand million Milliard G Giga-3 2 10 12: Trillion Billion Billion T Tera-4 2 10 15: Quadrillion Thousand billion Billiard P Peta-5 3 10 18: Quintillion Trillion Trillion E Exa-6 3 10 21: Sextillion Thousand trillion Trilliard Z Zetta-7 4 10 24: Septillion Quadrillion Quadrillion Y ...
Visualization of 1 trillion (short scale) A Rubik's cube, which has about 43 trillion (long scale) possible positions. Trillion is a number with two distinct definitions: 1,000,000,000,000, i.e. one million million, or 10 12 (ten to the twelfth power), as defined on the short scale. This is now the meaning in both American and British English.
For example 1,000,000,000,000 rather than 1 trillion (short scale) or 1 billion (long scale). This method becomes unwieldy for very large numbers. Combinations of the unambiguous words such as ten, hundred, thousand and million. For example: one thousand million and one million million. [5]
A $1,000 iPhone for 1 billion people. Over 4 million “average” homes in the U.S. Almost half of American student loan debt. There are currently only 19 countries in the world with a GDP over ...
1/52! chance of a specific shuffle Mathematics: The chances of shuffling a standard 52-card deck in any specific order is around 1.24 × 10 −68 (or exactly 1 ⁄ 52!) [4] Computing: The number 1.4 × 10 −45 is approximately equal to the smallest positive non-zero value that can be represented by a single-precision IEEE floating-point value.
one trillion a million billion: ten thousand crore crore ... The name of a negative number is the name of the corresponding positive number preceded by "minus" or ...
"Being given a number gives people a feeling of clarity." $1.46 million? $3 million? Financial experts say there’s no such thing as a single ‘magic’ retirement number
It can be seen that the order of magnitude is included in the number name in this example, because bi- means 2, tri- means 3, etc. (these make sense in the long scale only), and the suffix -illion tells that the base is 1 000 000. But the number names billion, trillion themselves (here with other meaning than in the first chapter) are not names ...