maffew
Well-known member
The US changed it to 1000 million so it could say it has the most billionaires and hoped no one would notice
I thought it was a million million too, although it seems to have shifted to a thousand million.As long as I can remember, the generally accepted definition of a billion has been 1,000 million. However, I'm fairly sure the original British definition of a billion was a million million. Does anybody ever still use that definition? Did anyone here use it in the past?
It seems a pretty pointlessly high number to me.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Names_of_large_numbers
Personally, I've always considered it to be:
Thousand = 10[SUP]3[/SUP]
Million = 10[SUP]6[/SUP]
Billion = 10[SUP]9[/SUP]
Trillion = 10[SUP]12[/SUP]
So how much is a thousand million billion trillion?
10[SUP]30[/SUP] (a nonillion)
Used to be able to get Billion Dollar Babies, back in the day
Can we tackle GALLONS next? Although I think I'd prefer to do away with imperial completely.
indeed and a 6 billion dollar man
Blimey, that's inflation. In the original (with Lee Majors) it was the Six MILLION dollar man. Probably just enough to buy you a bionic big toe now.
Can we tackle GALLONS next? Although I think I'd prefer to do away with imperial completely.
American PINTS can f*** off too. I always feel cheated when they give me 473ml instead of 568ml.
Whilst we're on the subject, selling liquids in WEIGHT. Ridiculous concept. I'll have 14oz of coffee, and can I have litre of cake too please?
Not as bad as the Aussies though - wtf is a Schooner or a Cup? One I thought was a boat and the other Features prominently in a video with two girls. Bloody idiots.
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At least we still have chains, and furlongs, and will do as long as we have cricket and horse racing.
As long as I can remember, the generally accepted definition of a billion has been 1,000 million. However, I'm fairly sure the original British definition of a billion was a million million. Does anybody ever still use that definition? Did anyone here use it in the past?
It seems a pretty pointlessly high number to me.
Well, yes. That was the whole point of my post.
As long as I can remember, the generally accepted definition of a billion has been 1,000 million. However, I'm fairly sure the original British definition of a billion was a million million. Does anybody ever still use that definition? Did anyone here use it in the past?
It seems a pretty pointlessly high number to me.
Must be “asking for a friend” or working on the bid to buy Wembley from the FA as have seen prices ranging from £500m-£1bln quoted in the press and Sahid Khan just wants to check which billion it is he’s offering?
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