No.
Yes.Proof:1 thousand = 10^31 billion = 10^915 thousand million = 15 x 10^3 x 10^6 = 15 x 10^9 (hint add the exponents)15 billion = 15 x 10^915 x 10^9 = 15 x 10^9 = True!!==========Orginal Answer:Yes, 15 billion is equal to 15 thousand million.15 billion = 1500000000015 thousand million = 15000000000thus 15 billion is equal to 15 thousand million
10 thousand multiplied by 150 million = 1,500,000,000,000
A million is universally 1 x 10^6, and a thousand is 1 x 10^3,so a thousand million million is 1 x 10^15 or 1,000,000,000,000,000.In the "short scale" used by the US, this is a thousand trillion or a "quadrillion."In the "long scale," where a billion is a million million, this is simply one thousand billion.
A lac is 100 thousand, a million is 1000 thousand so 10 lacs in 1 million.
10 hundred thousand (or a million) dollars.
No, a million is one thousand (1000) thousands. In numerical form, ten thousand is 10,000, and a million is 1,000,000
Yes.Proof:1 thousand = 10^31 billion = 10^915 thousand million = 15 x 10^3 x 10^6 = 15 x 10^9 (hint add the exponents)15 billion = 15 x 10^915 x 10^9 = 15 x 10^9 = True!!==========Orginal Answer:Yes, 15 billion is equal to 15 thousand million.15 billion = 1500000000015 thousand million = 15000000000thus 15 billion is equal to 15 thousand million
10 thousand multiplied by 150 million = 1,500,000,000,000
0.15
100 million/10 thousand = 10 thousand of them
A million is universally 1 x 10^6, and a thousand is 1 x 10^3,so a thousand million million is 1 x 10^15 or 1,000,000,000,000,000.In the "short scale" used by the US, this is a thousand trillion or a "quadrillion."In the "long scale," where a billion is a million million, this is simply one thousand billion.
100 million.
A lac is 100 thousand, a million is 1000 thousand so 10 lacs in 1 million.
the answer is 10,001,000
A million divided by a thousand is equal to one thousand. This is because when dividing by a power of ten, the decimal point shifts to the left the same number of places as the exponent of the power of ten. In this case, dividing by a thousand (10^3) shifts the decimal point three places to the left, resulting in one thousand.
10 hundred thousand (or a million) dollars.
Well, darling, ten thousand million is simply 10 billion. It's not rocket science, just basic math. So next time you need to throw around some big numbers, just remember that 10,000,000,000 is the same as ten thousand million.