1 thousand = 1,000
1 million = 1,000,000
750,000 thousand - 1 million = 750,000 × 1,000 - 1,000,000
= 750,000,000 - 1,000,000
= 749,000,000
= 749,000 × 1000
= 749000 thousand.
Chat with our AI personalities
Well, darling, one million minus one thousand is 999,000. Simple math, really. Just take away those three zeros and you're left with a number that's just a tad smaller than a million. Keep those brain cells sharp!
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.
The position immediately to the left of the one thousand place is the ten thousand place, then the one-hundred thousand place, and then the one million place..
The number 1000000.0001 shows the range from a million to ten thousandth. The place values from left to right are million, hundred thousand, ten thousand, thousand, hundred, ten, one, tenth, hundredth, thousandth and ten thousandth. Either spelled out or written as numbers, that is the contents of your chart.
Split the number into blocks of three digits each from the right hand end (the last bock on the left may have less than three digits in it).Read each block of three digits from the left hand end in terms of hundreds-tens-units and follow it by the appropriate multiplier ([none], "thousand", "million", etc)423090709000 -> 423 090 709 000Using the short scale, the multipliers (from the right hand end) are [none], "thousand", "million", "billion", "trillion", etc, so the number is:Four hundred and twenty three billion, ninety million, seven hundred and nine thousand.Using the long scale, the multipliers are [none], "thousand", "million", "thousand million" (or "milliard"), "billion", etc, so the number is:Four hundred and twenty three thousand million, ninety million, seven hundred and nine thousand.