Read on to learn what comes after trillion, the name of every important number that's larger than trillion, and some ways to help you conceptualize extremely large values. What Comes After Trillion? What's after trillion? Trillion is a 1 with 12 zeros after it, and it looks like this: ...
One trillion is written as 1,000,000,000,000 in which the number “1” is followed by 12 zeros. Its Mathematical notation is 1012. You can remember it as 4 groups of 3 zeros after the 1. And if you are wondering how many billions are there in a trillion, then take a...
For counting actual objects as opposed to just expressing a number, Japanese uses a unique system of 'counters', terms which are placed after the number and which partially describe the object being counted. For example, まい 枚 is the counter for flat objects such as sheets of paper, so ...
Japanese numbers 1-10: 1: 一 (いち, ichi), 2: 二 (に , ni), 3: 三 (さん, san), 4: 四 (よん or し, yon or shi), 5: 五 (ご, go), 6: 六 (ろく, roku)...
After saying the year, you’ll then say the month of the year. The best part is that you don’t need to learn a new set of words for the months. In Chinese, they are expressed by a simple combination of the numbers 1-12 and the word 月 (yuè) – month. Thus, January is 一月...
Note 1:Most of the text results in quotes ("One Hundred ", etc.) have a space after the words inside the quotes. Where you see two quotes as the result (""), there is no space within the quotes. Note 2:the Mod functions use the caret symbol (^), which is a shift-6 on the...
千亿 (qiān yì) = one-hundred billion3)兆 (zhào) / 万亿 (wàn yì) = one trillionSo as you can probably tell, there are three fundamental units (万、亿).Just with a few subsidiary characters, you are able to tell all the huge numbers under thirteen digits in Chinese!Next...
(zhāng), and for buildings, cities, bridges, mountains and other immovable objects you use the classifier 座 (zuò). They are added after the numeral and before the object, e.g. 一张纸 (yīzhāng zhǐ) = 1 piece of paper, and 一座山 (yīzuò shān) = a/one mountain. Many other ...
Telling the time in Chinese is easy once you learn the numbers from 1-12, as with most languages. Is all you need to do is add 点 after the number to make “O’Clock”… For example, 3 O’Clock would read 三(3)点. Simple!
(zhāng), and for buildings, cities, bridges, mountains and other immovable objects you use the classifier 座 (zuò). They are added after the numeral and before the object, e.g. 一张纸 (yīzhāng zhǐ) = 1 piece of paper, and 一座山 (yīzuò shān) = a/one mountain. Many other ...