No because a million numerically is 1,000,000
No, 1000 million would be a billion.
Yes
1 million millimetres.
No. A grand means 1000, so 100 grand is 100,000. A million dollars is 1,000,000 or "1000 grand".
The same prefixes as for any other units - kilo for 1000, Mega for a million (mega is not in common use, though), milli for 1/1000, micro for 1/1,000,000, etc.The same prefixes as for any other units - kilo for 1000, Mega for a million (mega is not in common use, though), milli for 1/1000, micro for 1/1,000,000, etc.The same prefixes as for any other units - kilo for 1000, Mega for a million (mega is not in common use, though), milli for 1/1000, micro for 1/1,000,000, etc.The same prefixes as for any other units - kilo for 1000, Mega for a million (mega is not in common use, though), milli for 1/1000, micro for 1/1,000,000, etc.
A kilometer is the same as 1000 meters. If you multiply a kilometer by 1000, you get a million meters, not one meter.
1000, or a million, depending on the country.1000, or a million, depending on the country.1000, or a million, depending on the country.1000, or a million, depending on the country.
1000 times 1000 equals 1 million. Therefore 1000 1000s equal 1 million
No, kilo means 1000 (approx 1000 in computing)
No. A meter is only a thousand (1000) millimeters.A meter can be divided into a million units, but they are called micrometers.
There are 3003 zeroes in a millillion, while there are 3006 zeroes in a millillion, or milliauntillion, or millimillion, which are the same way to represent 1000 millillion. Old answer, considering you really typed million into millillion: There are 9 noughts in a 1000 million
No. According to the USA definition of the billiion and trillion (also known as the "short scale): 1 billion = 1000 million = 1,000,000,000 1 trillion = 1000 billion (or a million million) = 1,000,000,000,000