1 Centillion (A 1 followed by 303 zeroes, also can be written as 10303).
Yes.
greater than any assignable quantity or countable number.
No, the set of all irrational numbers is not countable. Countable sets are those that can be put into a one-to-one correspondence with the natural numbers (1, 2, 3, ...). The set of irrational numbers is uncountable because it has a higher cardinality than the set of natural numbers. This was proven by Georg Cantor using his diagonalization argument.
The noun meeting is a countable noun; for example: We have a meeting this afternoon. We've had two meetings already this week.
No, you can add another 0 to the end and get a bigger number. You can keep doing this. That is why there is no biggest number.
countable
Yes it can assume countable number of outcomes.
27
It is countable because the singular or plural can be preceded by a number (one river, three rivers).
"Lamps" is a countable noun because you can easily quantify and count the number of individual lamps.
An adverbial number is a word which expresses a countable number of times, such as "twice".
continuous data
Yes, "rubbish" is a countable noun. You can refer to a number of individual items of rubbish as "rubbishes." For example, "There are three rubbishes in the bin."
countable
countable
The noun 'hill' is a countable noun. The plural form is 'hills'.
Discrete, because the number of Doctors in a hospital is countable.