6 more than 50000 OR 6+50000, i.e. 50006!
Oh, what a lovely number to turn into words! 84052 can be written as "eighty-four thousand and fifty-two." Just imagine painting each digit with gentle strokes of your brush, bringing this number to life on the canvas of your imagination.
Oh, dude, writing three hundred and fifty thousand in figures is like a walk in the park for me. You just slap down a 3, a 5, a 0, and three more zeros after that. Boom, there you have it, 350,000. Easy peasy lemon squeezy!
You should write 54 since it is a number more than ten.
60,851
There are many ways. Standard form, word form, short word form and one more but I don't know the name but it's where you add numbers to make that number. So there's standard: 3,250,000,652, there's also word form: three billion two hundred fifty six hundred fifty-two thousand, and short word from: 3 billion, 2 thousand fifty, 6 hundred twenty-five.
It's unlikely that you would ever need to write this number in words, more likely that you would need to speak it in words. When that happened, you would say: "One hundred eighty-nine million six hundred twelve thousand three hundred fifty-seven".
One lakh fifty thousand is a numerical expression commonly used in South Asian countries, equivalent to 150,000. In the Indian numbering system, "lakh" represents 100,000, so one lakh fifty thousand combines one lakh (100,000) with fifty thousand (50,000). This total can be represented in other numeral systems as well, such as 150K in a more general context.
If you were to write ten hundred thousand in figures, this would equal 1,000,000. More commonly, this number would be read one million.
30,14,097 or, in a more internationally accepted form, 3,014,097
Oh honey, you just write it as 5 trillion. Easy peasy lemon squeezy. No need to make it more complicated than it needs to be.
Yes...
The base roman numerals are: I one V five X ten L fifty C one hundred D five hundred M one thousand To make larger numbers, you put a bar above the numeral, or enclose it in parentheses for a more word-processor friendly format. Thus, you get (V) five thousand (X) ten thousand (L) fifty thousand (C) one hundred thousand (D) five hundred thousand (M) one million +++ To answer the implicit question - there is no "last" number in any system. The M for 1000 was only the largest number "name" in the Roman system.