It's from a game show. Originally, it was "the 64,000 dollar question" because that was the ultimate prize if a contestant answered the hardest question on the show. Nowadays, the phrase just means "the most important question" about a situation.
If the question meant infinity, the answer is none. Infinity is not a number.If the question meant infinity, the answer is none. Infinity is not a number.If the question meant infinity, the answer is none. Infinity is not a number.If the question meant infinity, the answer is none. Infinity is not a number.
1980.000.000. If you meant to round to the nearest tenthousand instead of million, then the result would have been 1.980.010.000 If you meant to round to the nearest million with 1.980.500.000, then the result would have been 1.981.000.000
More than likely, this idiom comes from archery and shooting. Being good with guns and projectile weapons is referred to as having "good marksmanship." So it means you hit what you aim to hit. So as an idiom, if you say something exactly as intended and your audience understands it the way you meant it, and you strike something your audience believes to be true, then you hit your mark.
I suspect that you asked for 8 3/4 million in standard form 1 million = 1,000,000 3/4 = 3 ÷ 4 = 0.75 → 8 3/4 million = 8.75 million = 8.75 × 1,000,000 = 8,750,000 If you meant 8.34 million, then: 8.34 million = 8.34 × 1,000,000 = 8,340,000 --------------------------------------------------------------------- In the UK, "Standard Form" is an alternative name for "Scientific Form". 1 million = 10⁶ → → 8 3/4 million = 8.75 million = 8.75 × 10⁶ If you meant 8.34 million, then: 8.34 million = 8.34 × 10⁶
One million billion trillion and one. If you meant what group of numbers, then the answer would be one million billion trillion quadrillion.
1 million dollars is equal to 1,000,000 United states dollars. I hope this is what you meant. If you needed clarification on the conversion to a different currency, then you need to rephrase your question.
to try new things
Language not meant to be take literally is called figurative language.
This isn't a common English idiom. Perhaps you read or heard a news story that used those terms -- in that case, they meant it literally. Someone was hit in the head with a hammer.
This isn't an idiom. I'm not sure what it's even supposed to mean. You probably heard some kind of children's slang, which means you'd have to ask them what they meant by it.
If the question meant infinity, the answer is none. Infinity is not a number.If the question meant infinity, the answer is none. Infinity is not a number.If the question meant infinity, the answer is none. Infinity is not a number.If the question meant infinity, the answer is none. Infinity is not a number.
Seventy-million. if you meant in numerical form, then 70 million.
There were three different One Dollar coin designs issued for general circulation in 2005. 2005 - QEII and 5 kangaroos - 5.792 million issued 2005 - QEII and 60th Anniversary of end of WW2 - 31.788 million issued 2005 - QEII and Gallipoli - 88,424 issued
That makes no sense, your question is wrong.
Idioms are phrases that you can't guess what they mean just by reading them. This phrase is asking you to figure out what the actual words of the idiom would mean -- the "implied meaning" is what's not said, but meant.
I believe the idiom you're looking for is "You can't trust a person further than you can throw them". The meaning is meant that you cannot trust someone because you can't throw them very far.
0.100 million is 100,000 rounded to the nearest thousand.