No if you have a look at a calculator and you try to get 1 gazillion it will just say "error".
Gazillion is an imaginary number, but is intended to indicate a lot of something.
no
99 gazillion billion google one
Not specifically.
A gazillion is a fictitious number, as are a Zillion, and Jillion.
no
99 gazillion billion google one
Not specifically.
There is no such number as a gazillion.
It depends on what you compare them to. For example, they are better than broccoli, but worse than a gazillion dollars (actually, many are equal to a gazillion dollars).
five gazillion
Here is the problem. There is really no such number as a gazillion. It is an expression used to mean a really big number. For example, we say that are a gazillion reasons not to do homework right now and one of them is to answer really fun wiki answers questions and we know there are a gazilion of those to answer. So there is nothing that can come after a number that does not exist. Another example of this is a bazillion which also is not really a number. One thing is sure about these non-numbers, if you answer a gazillion-billion wiki answer question you will know a lot, and you will be a ruby contributor. You may even win some wiki prizes!
A zillion is not a real number. Likewise for numbers such as jillion and gazillion.
Yes. The Gazillion Jumbubbler should be used with the One and Only Gazillion Bubble Solution.
There is actually no such thing as a zillion. It is a made up term for a huge number. So, I guess the hypothetical answer could be a bazillion or a gazillion, but these are just figures of speech/slang for incredibly large numbers.
In the Pacific NW Head Lice are called couties so California must have a gazillion.
== No. That is a made up number. There is a googleplex, though. == Yes, but a gazillion is like a zillion. It's defined as a large but unspecified number. We use terms like this to make a point. Here are some examples: There are a zillion galaxies in the universe! There are a gazillion bacteria floating around in the earth's atmosphere. You get the point here. We use these "numbers" in communication, but not in mathematics. They lack reference to a definite quantity, and are unsuitable to specifically measure or count things.