"Lakh" is a term used in South Asia, particularly in India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Nepal, to denote a quantity of one hundred thousand (100,000). It is often used in financial contexts to express large sums of money or population figures. For example, one lakh rupees refers to 100,000 rupees. The term is part of the Indian numbering system, which also includes terms like crore (ten million).
If you mean Lakh, one Lakh is 100,000 so 5 zeros
4.40 lakh/1000 = 4404.40 lakh/1000 = 4404.40 lakh/1000 = 4404.40 lakh/1000 = 440
72 lakh is 7,200,000 55.2 lakh is 5,520.,000
After 1 lakh (100,000), the next number is 1 lakh 1 (101,000). In terms of larger units, after 1 lakh comes 10 lakh, which is equal to 1 million (1,000,000). In the Indian numbering system, 1 lakh is followed by 2 lakh (200,000), and so on.
It is 0.5 lakh.
Lakh
If you mean Lakh, one Lakh is 100,000 so 5 zeros
Lakh
10 lakh or 1000 thousands.l
4.40 lakh/1000 = 4404.40 lakh/1000 = 4404.40 lakh/1000 = 4404.40 lakh/1000 = 440
72 lakh is 7,200,000 55.2 lakh is 5,520.,000
a lakh=100,000
1.8 lakh crore how to wright
After 1 lakh (100,000), the next number is 1 lakh 1 (101,000). In terms of larger units, after 1 lakh comes 10 lakh, which is equal to 1 million (1,000,000). In the Indian numbering system, 1 lakh is followed by 2 lakh (200,000), and so on.
It is 0.5 lakh.
1 lakh = 100,0001 billion = 1,000,000,000 = 10,000 lakh
In the number 55 lakh, there are five zeros. A lakh is equal to 100,000, so 55 lakh is 55 × 100,000, which is 5,500,000. Therefore, 55 lakh has five zeros.