Have you ever thought how many zeros are in one million? This is a pretty simple question. What about a billion or a trillion? A unit with nine zeros (1,000,000,000) - what is the name of the number?
Short list of numbers and their quantitative designation
- Ten (1 zero).
- One hundred (2 zeros).
- Thousand (3 zeros).
- Ten thousand (4 zeros).
- One hundred thousand (5 zeros).
- Million (6 zeros).
- Billion (9 zeros).
- Trillion (12 zeros).
- Quadrillion (15 zeros).
- Quintillion (18 zeros).
- Sextillion (21 zero).
- Septillon (24 zeros).
- Octalion (27 zeros).
- Nonalon (30 zeros).
- Decallion (33 zeros).
And so on, up to 100 zeros.
Zero Grouping
1,000,000,000 - what's the name of a number that has 9 zeros? This is a billion. For convenience, large numbers are usually grouped in three sets, separated from each other by a space or punctuation marks such as a comma or dot.
This is to make it easier to read and understand the quantitative value. For example, what is the name 1,000,000,000 called? In this form, it is worth a little reproach, count. And if you write 1,000,000,000, then immediately the task becomes easier visually, so you need to consider not zeros, but triples of zeros.
Numbers with a very large number of zeros
Of the large numbers, the most popular are the million and billion (1,000,000,000). What is the name of a number having 100 zeros? This is the googol figure, also called Milton Sirotta. This is a wildly huge amount. Do you think this number is large? Then what about googolplex, the unit followed by googol zeros? This figure is so large that itβs difficult to think of a meaning for it. In fact, there is no need for such giants, except to count the number of atoms in an infinite universe.
1 billion is a lot?
There are two measurement scales - short and long. Worldwide, in the field of science and finance, 1 billion is 1,000 million. It is on a short scale. According to it, this is a number with 9 zeros.
There is also a long scale, which is used in some European countries, including France, and was previously used in the UK (until 1971), where the billion amounted to 1 million million, that is, one and 12 zeros. This gradation is also called the long-term scale. The short scale is now prevailing in solving financial and scientific issues.
Some European languages, such as Swedish, Danish, Portuguese, Spanish, Italian, Dutch, Norwegian, Polish, German, use a billion (or billion) of them in this system. In Russian, a number with 9 zeros is also described for a short scale of one thousand million, and a trillion is a million million. This avoids unnecessary confusion.
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In Russian colloquial speech after the events of 1917 - the Great October Revolution - and the period of hyperinflation in the early 1920s. 1 billion rubles was called "limard." And in the dashing 1990s, for a billion, a new slang expression βwatermelonβ appeared, a million was called βlemonβ.
The word "billion" is now used internationally. This is a natural number, which is represented in the decimal system as 10 9 (unit and 9 zeros). There is also another name - billion, which is not used in Russia and the CIS countries.
Billion = billion?
Such a word as billion is used to designate a billion only in those states in which the βshort scaleβ is taken as the basis. These are countries such as the Russian Federation, the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, the USA, Canada, Greece and Turkey. In other countries, the term billion means the number 10 12 , that is, one and 12 zeros. In countries with a "short scale", including Russia, this figure corresponds to 1 trillion.
Such a mess appeared in France at the time when the emergence of such a science as algebra took place. Initially, the billion had 12 zeros. However, everything changed after the appearance of the main manual on arithmetic (author Tranchean) in 1558), where a billion is already a number with 9 zeros (one thousand million).
Over the next several centuries, these two concepts were used on a par with each other. In the middle of the 20th century, namely in 1948, France switched to the long scale of the numerical name system. In this regard, the short scale, once borrowed from the French, is still different from the one they use today.
Historically, the United Kingdom used the long-term billion, but since 1974, official UK statistics have used the short-term scale. Since the 1950s, the short-term scale has been increasingly used in the areas of technical writing and journalism, despite the fact that the long-term scale is still maintained.