Count one million, two million, etc. until you reach 999 million. After that, the next number is a billion, and the cycle repeats.
I'm not sure, but you need to follow the basic: 1-one 10-ten 100-hundred 1000-thousand 10000-10 thousand 100000- 100 thousand 1000000- million 10000000-10 million 100000000- 100 million 1000000000- billion 10000000000- 10 billion 100000000000 100 billion 1000000000000 trillion 12 0s I think..i think that you just need to add 0s.. sorry if I'm wrong I think..or just count cause I may be wrong. Hope that help!!!
That depends on whether you're using the "long count" or the "short count". In the short count, it would be 18. In the long count, it would be 24.
I recall reading that it would take you 3 weeks to count to a million if you counted all day, taking time off to eat and sleep. So to count to a billion would take 1000 times 3 weeks.
This depends on which country you are in. If you are in a country that uses the long-count method (1 billion=1 million million), then 6,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 is six quadrillion. If you are in a country that uses the shout-count method (1 billion=1 thousand million). then 6,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 is six septillion.
599,999 days.
If you counted 1 number per second, it would take 4000 trillion months (320 trillion years) to count all 10 billion trillion stars (100 billion per galaxy) in a fictitious version of our universe.
If you counted at the rate of one number per second, it would take 320 trillion years to count to 10 billion trillion. It makes no difference WHAT you're counting.
Start at a million and one, a million and two, ... and keep going.
In the "short count" system, 1 million is 1,000,000 and 1 billion is 1,000,000,000, so there are a thousand million in a billion. In the "long count" system, there are a million million in a billion and a thousand million is either called that or some word cognate with "milliard". The US uses pretty much exclusively short count. In Europe, you could see either; you need to know what the convention is where you are to know for sure what a billion is.
Quadrillion which is followed by quintillion, sextillion, septillion, octillion, nonillion and decillion. How many zeros come after each of these numbers varies. In the United States and scientific communities, every addition of three zeros brings about a new series, i.e. a thousand of any set makes it change to the next set of numbers. A thousand million equals a billion, a thousand billion equals a trillion. Other countries change at 6 extra zeros, allowing a thousands count of each set of numbers, so a million millions is a billion, a million billions is a trillion etc.
more than a billion. too many numbers to count, lets just say over a billion or over a trillion
I'm not sure, but you need to follow the basic: 1-one 10-ten 100-hundred 1000-thousand 10000-10 thousand 100000- 100 thousand 1000000- million 10000000-10 million 100000000- 100 million 1000000000- billion 10000000000- 10 billion 100000000000 100 billion 1000000000000 trillion 12 0s I think..i think that you just need to add 0s.. sorry if I'm wrong I think..or just count cause I may be wrong. Hope that help!!!
That depends on whether you're using the "long count" or the "short count". In the short count, it would be 18. In the long count, it would be 24.
The same as a billion in the US. A thousand million.However, a long time ago, a 'British billion' was a million million, ie. a thousand times bigger than a US billion. The term 'billiard' is sometimes used to mean 'British billion' to clear up the confusion.Everybody in the UK uses the same definition as in the US though.
Well, lets see it take 16 minutes to count to a thousand 31 billion years to count to a quintillion and very and probably and get ready 31 trillion years at least
The U.S. uses the short scale method. In the U.S., we call 1,000,000,000 a billion, not a thousand million or a milliard. The short scale has been taught exclusively in schools for a very long time, and few Americans even know that "one billion" can, for much of the world, refer to what Americans call a trillion.
"one quadrillion, seventy-two trillion, four hundred and eighteen billion, three million dollars" I don't think this one count because of Zimbabwe's inflation rate. Source: http://blog.mises.org/archives/009201.asp