Quadrillion,Quintillion,Sextillion,Septillion,Octillion,Nonillion,Decillion(arranged in increasing order.)
Greek numerals are a system of representing numbers using the letters of the Greek alphabet. They are also known as Milesian numerals, Alexandrian numerals, or alphabetic numerals. In modern Greece, they are still in use for ordinal numbers.
"The father of numbers."Pythagoras was an ancient Greek mathematician famous for his theorem for a right angle triangle.
Pythagorean Theorem would be the first thing to come to mind. Well, this is kind of more related to art/architecture, but there is the golden rectangle and the golden ratio. The golden ratio is represented by the Greek letter phi, which appears as a circle with a slash going through it. It is a value representing the ratio of the lesser to the greater when the ratio of the lesser to the greater is the same as the ratio of the greater to the whole. In Ancient Greek, architects used this technique to create beautiful buildings and works of art, where the ratio of the length to the width of the rectangle in one of the structures (or vice versa) is equal to the golden ratio.
Σ This is the Greek letter Sigma. It is used to start the Autosum facility.
You can use the AutoSum facility which can be triggered by clicking on the Greek letter sigma, which looks like a strange capital E like this: Σ
Greek prefixes for numbersmonoditritetrapentahexaheptaoctaenneadecaWhat_are_the_different_Greek_prefixes
Greek prefixes for numbersmonoditritetrapentahexaheptaoctaenneadeca
Most prefixes come from either Latin or Greek.
Most of them are of Greek origin.
Quadri (Latin) and Tetra (Greek) are both prefixes used for the number 4
thdgksbgtknfkb
photo- comes from a Greek for light.
one- unique- single- simple-
tri, penta, hepta
Greek, from 'autos', self
greek numbers
Adjectives