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The long and short scales are two powers of ten number naming systems that are consistent with each other for smaller numbers, but are contradictory for larger numbers. Other numbering systems, particularly in East Asia and South Asia, have large number naming that differs from both the long and short scales. Such numbering systems include the Indian numbering system and Chinese, Japanese, and Korean numerals. Much of the remainder of the world adopted either the short or long scale. Countries using the long scale include most countries in continental Europe and most that are French-speaking, German-speaking and Spanish-speaking. Use of the short scale is found in most English and Arabic speaking countries and Brazil.
For powers of ten less than 9 (one, ten, hundred, thousand and million) the short and long scales are identical, but for larger powers of ten, the two systems differ in confusing ways. For identical names, the long scale grows by multiples of one million (106), whereas the short scale grows by multiples of one thousand (103). For example, the short scale billion is one thousand million (109), whereas in the long scale, billion is one million million (1012). The long scale system includes additional names for interleaved values, typically replacing the word ending "-ion" by "-iard".
To avoid confusion, the International System of Units (SI) recommends using the metric prefixes to indicate magnitude. For example giga is always 109, which is billion in short scale but milliard in long scale.
Definition
In both scales, names are given to orders of magnitude at increments of 1000. Both systems use the same names for magnitudes less than 109. Differences arise from the use of identical names for larger magnitudes. For the same magnitude name (n-illion), the value is 103n+3 in the short scale but 106n in the long scale for positive integers n.
In some languages, the long scale uses additional names for the intermediate multipliers, replacing the ending -ion with -iard; for example, the next multiplier after million is milliard (109); after a billion it is billiard (1015). Hence, a long scale n-illiard equals 106n+3.
The following table shows the size of first few short and long scale magnitudes. Notice how billion and trillion are in both scales but have different sizes.
Quantity | Short scale | Long scale |
---|---|---|
106 | million | million |
109 | billion | milliard |
1012 | trillion | billion |
1015 | quadrillion | billiard |
1018 | quintillion | trillion |
1021 | sextillion | trilliard |
Comparison
The following tables shows corresponding names and values of the two scales.
Note that instead of using an intermediate long scale word (illiard), a quantity is sometimes specified in terms of the smaller illion word. For example, "thousand billion" instead of "billiard".
Value | Metric prefix | Short scale | Long scale |
---|---|---|---|
1 | one | one | |
10 | deca | ten | ten |
102 | hecto | hundred | hundred |
103 | kilo | thousand | thousand |
106 | mega | million | million |
109 | giga | billion or milliard | milliard |
1012 | tera | trillion | billion |
1015 | peta | quadrillion | billiard |
1018 | exa | quintillion | trillion |
1021 | zetta | sextillion | trilliard |
1024 | yotta | septillion | quadrillion |
1027 | ronna | octillion | quadrilliard |
1030 | quetta | nonillion | quintillion |
The different sizes of the same names of the two scales can be described as:
Name | Short scale | Long scale |
---|---|---|
million | 106 | 106 |
billion | 109 | 1012 |
trillion | 1012 | 1018 |
quadrillion | 1015 | 1024 |
quintillion | 1018 | 1030 |
. . . | . . . |
Avoiding confusion
One way to avoid confusion between the two scales is to use positional notation. For example 1,000,000,000,000 rather than 1 trillion (short scale) or 1 billion (long scale). This method becomes unwieldy for very large numbers.
Combinations of the unambiguous words such as ten, hundred, thousand and million. For example: one thousand million and one million million.
Scientific notation (for example 1×1010), or its engineering notation variant (for example 10×109), or the computing variant E notation (for example 1e10
). This is the most common practice among scientists and mathematicians.
SI metric prefixes. For example, giga for 109 and tera for 1012 can give gigawatt (109 W) and terawatt (1012 W). Use with non-SI units is unambiguous. For example, giga-dollars, megabucks, k€ and M€.
History
Although this situation has been developing since the 1200s, the first recorded use of the terms short scale (French: échelle courte) and long scale (French: échelle longue) was by the French mathematician Geneviève Guitel in 1975.
The short scale was never widespread before its general adoption in the United States. It has been taught in American schools since the early 1800s. It has since become common in other English-speaking nations and several other countries. For most of the 19th and early 20th centuries, the United Kingdom largely used the long scale, whereas the United States used the short scale, so that the two systems were often referred to as British and American in the English language. After several decades of increasing informal British usage of the short scale, in 1974 the government of the UK adopted it, and it is used for all official purposes. The British usage and American usage are now identical.
The existence of the different scales means that care must be taken when comparing large numbers between languages or countries, or when interpreting old documents in countries where the dominant scale has changed over time. For example, British English, French, and Italian historical documents can refer to either the short or long scale, depending on the date of the document, since each of the three countries has used both systems at various times in its history. Today, the United Kingdom officially uses the short scale, but France and Italy use the long scale.
The pre-1974 former British English word billion, post-1961 current French word billion, post-1994 current Italian word bilione, Spanish billón, German Billion, Dutch biljoen, Danish billion, Swedish biljon, Finnish biljoona, Slovenian bilijon, Polish bilion, and European Portuguese word bilião (with a different spelling to the Brazilian Portuguese variant, but in Brazil referring to short scale) all refer to 1012, being long-scale terms. Therefore, each of these words translates to the American English or post-1974 British English word: trillion (1012 in the short scale), and not billion (109 in the short scale).
On the other hand, the pre-1961 former French word billion, pre-1994 former Italian word bilione, Brazilian Portuguese word bilhão, and Welsh word biliwn all refer to 109, being short scale terms. Each of these words translates to the American English or post-1974 British English word billion (109 in the short scale).
The term billion originally meant 1012 when introduced. In long scale countries, milliard was defined to its current value of 109, leaving billion at its original 1012 value and so on for the larger numbers. Some of these countries, but not all, introduced new words billiard, trilliard, etc. as intermediate terms. In some short scale countries, milliard was defined to 109 and billion dropped altogether, with trillion redefined down to 1012 and so on for the larger numbers. In many short scale countries, milliard was dropped altogether and billion was redefined down to 109, adjusting downwards the value of trillion and all the larger numbers.
The root mil in million does not refer to the numeral, 1. The word, million, derives from the Old French, milion, from the earlier Old Italian, milione, an intensification of the Latin word, mille, a thousand. That is, a million is a big thousand, much as a great gross is a dozen gross or 12 × 144 = 1728.
The word milliard, or its translation, is found in many European languages and is used in those languages for 109. However, it is not found in American English, which uses billion, and not used in British English, which preferred to use thousand million before the current usage of billion. The financial term yard, which derives from milliard, is used on financial markets, as, unlike the term billion, it is internationally unambiguous and phonetically distinct from million. Likewise, many long scale countries use the word billiard (or similar) for one thousand long scale billions (i.e., 1015), and the word trilliard (or similar) for one thousand long scale trillions (i.e., 1021), etc.
- Timeline
Date | Event |
---|---|
13th century | The word million was not used in any language before the 13th century. The monk and polymath Maximus Planudes (c. 1260–1305) was among the first recorded users of the word to document Mediterranean trade between Constantinople and Italian states. Over the next two centuries, the term became widely accepted and was adopted by other Italian states, France and other European countries. |
Late 14th century | ![]() Piers Plowman, a 17th-century copy of the original 14th-century allegorical narrative poem by William Langland
Translation:
|
1475 | French mathematician Jehan Adam, writing in Middle French, recorded the words bymillion and trimillion as meaning 1012 and 1018 respectively in a manuscript Traicté en arismetique pour la practique par gectouers, now held in the Bibliothèque Sainte-Geneviève in Paris.
Translation:
|
1484 | ![]() Le Triparty en la Science des Nombres par Maistre Nicolas Chuquet Parisien an extract from Chuquet's original 1484 manuscript
Translation:
The extract from Chuquet's manuscript, the transcription and translation provided here all contain an original mistake: one too many zeros in the 804300 portion of the fully written out example: 745324'8043000 '700023'654321 ... |
1516 | ![]() Guilielmus Budaeus or Guillaume Budé (1467–1540)
Translation:
|
1549 | The influential French mathematician Jacques Pelletier du Mans used the name milliard (or milliart) to mean 1012, attributing the term to the earlier usage by Guillaume Budé |
17th century | With the increased usage of large numbers, the traditional punctuation of large numbers into six-digit groups evolved into three-digit group punctuation. In some places, the large number names were then applied to the smaller numbers, following the new punctuation scheme. Thus, in France and Italy, some scientists then began using billion to mean 109, trillion to mean 1012, etc. This usage formed the origins of the later short scale. The majority of scientists either continued to say thousand million or changed the meaning of the Pelletier term, milliard, from "million of millions" down to "thousand million". This meaning of milliard has been occasionally used in England, but was widely adopted in France, Germany, Italy and the rest of Europe, for those keeping the original long scale billion from Adam, Chuquet and Pelletier. |
1676 | The first published use of milliard as 109 occurred in the Netherlands.
Translation:
|
1729 | The short-scale meaning of the term billion had already been brought to the British American colonies. The first American appearance of the short scale value of billion as 109 was published in the Greenwood Book of 1729, written anonymously by Prof. Isaac Greenwood of Harvard College. |
Late 18th century | As early as 1762 (and through at least the early 20th century), the dictionary of the Académie française defined billion as a term of arithmetic meaning a thousand millions. |
Early 19th century | France widely converted to the short scale, and was followed by the U.S., which began teaching it in schools. Many French encyclopedias of the 19th century either omitted the long scale system or called it "désormais obsolète", a now obsolete system. Nevertheless, by the mid 20th century France would officially convert back to the long scale. |
1926 | ![]()
Although American English usage did not change, within the next 50 years French usage changed from short scale to long and British English usage changed from long scale to short. |
1948 | The 9th General Conference on Weights and Measures received requests to establish an International System of Units. One such request was accompanied by a draft French Government discussion paper, which included a suggestion of universal use of the long scale, inviting the short-scale countries to return or convert. This paper was widely distributed as the basis for further discussion. The matter of the International System of Units was eventually resolved at the 11th General Conference in 1960. The question of long scale versus short scale was not resolved and does not appear in the list of any conference resolutions. |
1960 | The 11th General Conference on Weights and Measures adopted the International System of Units (SI), with its own set of numeric prefixes. SI is therefore independent of the number scale being used. SI also notes the language-dependence of some larger-number names and advises against using ambiguous terms such as billion, trillion, etc. The National Institute of Standards and Technology within the US also considers that it is best that they be avoided entirely. |
1961 | The French Government confirmed their official usage of the long scale in the Journal officiel (the official French Government gazette). |
1974 | ![]() British prime minister Harold Wilson (1916–1995)
The BBC and other UK mass media quickly followed the government's lead within the UK. During the last quarter of the 20th century, most other English-speaking countries (Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, Zimbabwe, etc.) either also followed this lead or independently switched to the short scale use. However, in most of these countries, some limited long scale use persists and the official status of the short scale use is not clear. |
1975 | French mathematician Geneviève Guitel introduced the terms long scale (French: échelle longue) and short scale (French: échelle courte) to refer to the two numbering systems. |
1994 | The Italian Government confirmed their official usage of the long scale. |
Current usage
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Short scale users
English-speaking
Most English-language countries and regions use the short scale with 109 being billion. For example:
Australia
Canada (English-speaking) see Using both below
Ireland (English-speaking, Irish: billiún, trilliún)
United Kingdom
United States
Arabic-speaking
Most Arabic-language countries and regions use the short scale with 109 being مليار milyar, except for a few countries like Saudi Arabia and the UAE which use the word بليون billion for 109. For example:
Algeria
Egypt
Iraq
Morocco
Saudi Arabia
United Arab Emirates
Other short scale
Other countries also use a word similar to trillion to mean 1012, etc. Whilst a few of these countries like English use a word similar to billion to mean 109, most like Arabic have kept a traditionally long scale word similar to milliard for 109. Some examples of short scale use, and the words used for 109 and 1012, are
Long scale users
The long scale is used by most Continental European countries and by most other countries whose languages derive from Continental Europe (with the notable exceptions of Albania, Greece, Romania, and Brazil). These countries use a word similar to billion to mean 1012. Some use a word similar to milliard to mean 109, while others use a word or phrase equivalent to thousand millions.
Dutch-speaking
Most Dutch-language countries and regions use the long scale with 109 = miljard.
French-speaking
Most French-language countries and regions use the long scale with 109 = milliard, for example:
Canada (Canadian French) see Using both below
France
German-speaking
German-language countries and regions use the long scale with 109 = Milliarde.
Portuguese-speaking
With the notable exception of Brazil, a short scale country, most Portuguese-language countries and regions use the long scale with 109 = mil milhões or milhar de milhões.
Spanish-speaking
Most Spanish-language countries and regions use the long scale, for example:
Other long scale
Some examples of long scale use, and the words used for 109 and 1012, are
Iran (Persian: میلیارد miliyard, بیلیون billion, تریلیون trillion) [citation needed]
Italy (miliardo, bilione)
Poland (miliard, bilion)
Switzerland (French: milliard, billion; German: Milliarde, Billion; Italian: miliardo, bilione; Romansh: milliarda, billiun)
Using both
Some countries use either the short or long scales, depending on the internal language being used or the context.
Country or territory | Short scale usage | Long scale usage |
---|---|---|
![]() | Canadian English (109 = billion, 1012 = trillion) | Canadian French (109 = milliard, 1012 = billion or mille milliards). |
| English (109 = billion, 1012 = trillion) | French (109 = milliard, 1012 = billion) |
South African English (109 = billion, 1012 = trillion) | Afrikaans (109 = miljard, 1012 = biljoen) | |
![]() | Economic and technical (109 = billón, 1012 = trillón) | Latin American export publications (109 = millardo or mil millones, 1012 = billón) |
Using neither
The following countries use naming systems for large numbers that are not etymologically related to the short and long scales:
Country | Number system | Naming of large numbers |
---|---|---|
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | Indian numbering system | Traditional system for everyday use, but short or long scale may also be in use |
![]() | Dzongkha numerals | Traditional system |
![]() | Khmer numerals | Traditional system |
| East Asian numbering system:
| Traditional myriad system for the larger numbers; special words and symbols up to 1068 |
![]() | Calque of the short scale | Names of the short scale have not been loaned but calqued into Greek, based on the native Greek word for million, εκατομμύριο ekatommyrio ("hundred-myriad", i.e. 100 × 10,000):
|
![]() | Lao numerals | Traditional system |
![]() | Mongolian numerals | Traditional myriad system for the larger numbers; special words up to 1067 |
![]() |
| Traditional systems |
![]() | Thai numerals | Traditional system based on millions |
![]() | Vietnamese numerals | Traditional system(s) based on thousands |
By continent
The long and short scales are both present on most continents, with usage dependent on the language used. For example:
Continent | Short scale usage | Long scale usage |
---|---|---|
Africa | Arabic (Egypt, Libya), South African English | French (Benin, Guinea), Portuguese (Mozambique) |
North America | American English, Canadian English | Canadian French, Mexican Spanish, U.S. Spanish |
South America | Brazilian Portuguese, English (Guyana) | American Spanish, Dutch (Suriname), French (French Guiana) |
Antarctica | Australian English, British English, New Zealand English, Russian | American Spanish (Argentina, Chile), French (France), Norwegian (Norway) |
Asia | Hebrew (Israel), Indonesian, Philippine English | Persian (Iran), Portuguese (East Timor, Macau) |
Europe | British English, Russian, Turkish | Dutch, French, German, Italian, Portuguese, Spanish |
Oceania | Australian English, New Zealand English | French (French Polynesia, New Caledonia) |
Notes on current usage
Short scale
- English language countries: Apart from the United States, the long scale was used for centuries in many English language countries before being superseded in recent times by short scale usage. Because of this history, some long scale use persists and the official status of the short scale in anglophone countries other than the UK and US is sometimes obscure.
- Australian usage: In Australia, education, media outlets, and literature all use the short scale in line with other English-speaking countries. The current recommendation by the Australian Government Department of Finance and Deregulation (formerly known as AusInfo), and the legal definition, is the short scale. As recently as 1999, the same department did not consider short scale to be standard, but only used it occasionally. Some documents use the term thousand million for 109 in cases where two amounts are being compared using a common unit of one 'million'.
- British usage: Billion has meant 109 in most sectors of official published writing for many years now. The UK government, the BBC, and most other broadcast or published mass media, have used the short scale in all contexts since the mid-1970s. Before the widespread use of billion for 109, UK usage generally referred to thousand million rather than milliard. The long scale term milliard, for 109, is obsolete in British English, though its derivative, yard, is still used as slang in the London money, foreign exchange, and bond markets.
- American usage: In the United States, the short scale has been taught in school since the early 19th century. It is therefore used exclusively.
- Arabic language countries: Most Arabic-language countries use: 106, مليون million; 109, مليار milyar; 1012, ترليون trilyon; etc.
- Indonesian usage: Large numbers are common in Indonesia, in part because its currency (rupiah) is generally expressed in large numbers (the lowest common circulating denomination is Rp100 with Rp1000 is considered as base unit). The term juta, equivalent to million (106), is generally common in daily life. Indonesia officially employs the term miliar (derived from the long scale Dutch word miljard) for the number 109, with no exception. For 1012 and greater, Indonesia follows the short scale, thus 1012 is named triliun. The term seribu miliar (a thousand milliards) or more rarely sejuta juta (a million millions) or sejuta berkali-kali (a millions after a million or a millions over a million) are also used for 1012 less often. Terms greater than triliun are not very familiar to Indonesians.
Long scale
- French usage: France, with Italy, was one of two European countries which converted from the long scale to the short scale during the 19th century, but returned to the original long scale during the 20th century. In 1961, the French Government confirmed their long scale status. However the 9th edition of the dictionary of the Académie française describes billion as an outdated synonym of milliard, and says that the new meaning of 1012 was decreed in 1961, but never caught on.
- Spanish language countries: Spanish-speaking countries sometimes use millardo (milliard) for 109, but mil millones (thousand millions) is used more frequently. The word billón is sometimes used in the short scale sense in those countries more influenced by the United States, where "billion" means "one thousand millions". The usage of billón to mean "one thousand millions", controversial from the start, was denounced by the Royal Spanish Academy as recently as 2010, but was finally accepted in a later version of the official dictionary as standard usage among educated Spanish speakers in the United States (including Puerto Rico).
- Italian usage: Italy, with France, was one of the two European countries which partially converted from the long scale to the short scale during the 19th century, but returned to the original long scale in the 20th century. In 1994, the Italian Government confirmed its long scale status. In Italian, the word bilione officially means 1012, trilione means 1018, etc.. Colloquially, bilione can mean both 109 and 1012; trilione [citation needed] can mean both 1012 and (rarer) 1018 and so on. Therefore, in order to avoid ambiguity, they are seldom used. Forms such as miliardo (milliard) for 109, mille miliardi (a thousand milliards) for 1012, un milione di miliardi (a million milliards) for 1015, un miliardo di miliardi (a milliard of milliards) for 1018, mille miliardi di miliardi (a thousand milliard of milliards) for 1021 are more common.
Both long and short scale
- Canadian usage: Both scales are in use currently in Canada. English-speaking regions use the short scale exclusively, while French-speaking regions use the long scale, though the Canadian government standards website recommends that in French billion and trillion be avoided, recommending milliard for 109, and mille milliards (a thousand milliards) for 1012.
- South African usage: South Africa uses both the long scale (in Afrikaans and sometimes English) and the short scale (in English). Unlike the 1974 UK switch, the switch from long scale to short scale took time. As of 2011[update] most English language publications use the short scale. Some Afrikaans publications briefly attempted usage of the "American System" but that has led to comment in the papers and has been disparaged by the "Taalkommissie" (The Afrikaans Language Commission of the South African Academy of Science and Art) and has thus, to most appearances, been abandoned.
Neither long nor short scale
- Indian, Pakistani and Bangladeshi usage: Outside of financial media, the use of billion by Bangladeshi, Indian and Pakistani English speakers highly depends on their educational background. Some may continue to use the traditional British long scale. In everyday life, Bangladeshis, Indians and Pakistanis largely use their own common number system, commonly referred to as the Indian numbering system – for instance, Bangladeshi, Pakistani, and Indian English commonly use the words lakh to denote 100 thousand, crore to denote ten million (i.e. 100 lakhs) and arab to denote thousand million.
See also
- Googol (number)
- Googolplex (number)
- Names of large numbers
- Names of small numbers
- Orders of magnitude (numbers)
- Hindu units of time which displays some similar issues
- Indian numbering system
References
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Ce n'est qu'au milieu du XVIIe siècle qu'il fut réglé que les tranches, au lieu d'être de six en six chiffres, seraient de trois en trois chiffres; ce qui revint à diviser par 1000 l'ancien billion, l'ancien trillion, etc. [It was only in the middle of the 17th century that it was settled that the slices, instead of being from six to six digits, would be from three to three digits; which resulted in dividing by 1000 the old billion, the old trillion, and so on.]
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- "RBA: Definition of billion". Reserve Bank of Australia. Retrieved 22 August 2011.
- "BBC News: Who wants to be a trillionaire?". BBC. 7 May 2007. Retrieved 11 May 2010.
- "billion". Cambridge Dictionaries Online. Cambridge University Press. Retrieved 21 August 2011.[permanent dead link ]
- "trillion". Cambridge Dictionaries Online. Cambridge University Press. Retrieved 21 August 2011.[permanent dead link ]
- "Al Jazem English-Arabic online dictionary: Billion". Al Jazem English-Arabic online dictionary. Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 6 June 2012.
- "Al Jazem English-Arabic online dictionary:Trillion". Al Jazem English-Arabic online dictionary. Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 6 June 2012.
- Robson S. O. (Stuart O.), Singgih Wibisono, Yacinta Kurniasih. Javanese English dictionary Tuttle Publishing: 2002, ISBN 0-7946-0000-X, 821 pages
- Avram, Mioara; Sala, Marius (2000), May We Introduce the Romanian Language to You?, Editura Fundatiei Culturale Române, p. 151, ISBN 9789735772246,
the numeral miliard "billion"
- "De Geïntegreerde Taal-Bank: miljard" (in Dutch). Instituut voor Nederlandse Lexicologie. Retrieved 19 August 2011.
- "De Geïntegreerde Taal-Bank: biljoen" (in Dutch). Instituut voor Nederlandse Lexicologie. Retrieved 19 August 2011.
- "French Larousse: milliard" (in French). Éditions Larousse. Archived from the original on 18 March 2012. Retrieved 19 August 2011.
- "French Larousse: billion" (in French). Éditions Larousse. Archived from the original on 18 March 2012. Retrieved 19 August 2011.
- "billion". Dictionnaire de l'Académie française (in French) (9th ed.). Académie française. 1992. Retrieved 17 January 2016.
BILLION (les deux l se prononcent sans mouillure) n. m. XVe siècle, byllion, « un million de millions »; XVIe siècle, « mille millions ». Altération arbitraire de l'initiale de million, d'après la particule latine bi-, « deux fois ».
[BILLION (the two Ls are pronounced without palatalisation) masculine noun. Spelled byllion in the 15th century when it meant a million millions; in the 16th century it meant a thousand millions. It is an arbitrary alteration of the start of million by inserting the Latin prefix bi-, meaning twice. Now rarely used. It means a thousand millions. It is an outdated synonym of Milliard. According to a decree of 1961, the word Billion received a new value, to wit a million millions (1012), which has not come into common usage.][permanent dead link ]
Rare. Mille millions. Syn. vieilli de Milliard. Selon un décret de 1961, le mot Billion a reçu une nouvelle valeur, à savoir un million de millions (1012), qui n'est pas entrée dans l'usage. - "Diccionario Panhispánico de Dudas: millardo" (in Spanish). Real Academia Española. Retrieved 19 August 2011.
- "Diccionario Panhispánico de Dudas: billon" (in Spanish). Real Academia Española. Retrieved 24 July 2010.
- "Diccionario de la lengua española" (in Spanish). Real Academia Española. Retrieved 2 July 2018.
- "Italian-English Larousse: bilione". Éditions Larousse. Archived from the original on 18 March 2012. Retrieved 21 August 2011.
- "Switzerland: Words and Phrases". TRAMsoft Gmbh. 29 August 2009. Retrieved 15 August 2011.
- "Canadian government standards website". Canadian Government. 2010. Retrieved 15 September 2010.
- "billion". Granddictionnaire.com. 13 May 2013. Retrieved 24 April 2018.
- "Taalkommissie se reaksie op biljoen, triljoen" (in Afrikaans). Naspers: Media24. Archived from the original on 14 July 2014. Retrieved 16 July 2014.
- "'Groen boek': mooiste, beste, gebruikersvriendelikste" (in Afrikaans). Naspers:Media24. Archived from the original on 14 July 2014. Retrieved 16 July 2014.
- Gupta, S.V. (2010). Units of measurement: past, present and future: international system of units. Springer. pp. 12 (Section 1.2.8 Numeration). ISBN 978-3642007385. Retrieved 22 August 2011.
- Foundalis, Harry. "Greek Numbers and Numerals (Ancient and Modern)". Retrieved 20 May 2007.
External links
- BBC News article: "Is trillion the new billion?"
- Live-Counter.com: How to visualize large numbers:"
The long and short scales are two powers of ten number naming systems that are consistent with each other for smaller numbers but are contradictory for larger numbers Other numbering systems particularly in East Asia and South Asia have large number naming that differs from both the long and short scales Such numbering systems include the Indian numbering system and Chinese Japanese and Korean numerals Much of the remainder of the world adopted either the short or long scale Countries using the long scale include most countries in continental Europe and most that are French speaking German speaking and Spanish speaking Use of the short scale is found in most English and Arabic speaking countries and Brazil For powers of ten less than 9 one ten hundred thousand and million the short and long scales are identical but for larger powers of ten the two systems differ in confusing ways For identical names the long scale grows by multiples of one million 106 whereas the short scale grows by multiples of one thousand 103 For example the short scale billion is one thousand million 109 whereas in the long scale billion is one million million 1012 The long scale system includes additional names for interleaved values typically replacing the word ending ion by iard To avoid confusion the International System of Units SI recommends using the metric prefixes to indicate magnitude For example giga is always 109 which is billion in short scale but milliard in long scale DefinitionIn both scales names are given to orders of magnitude at increments of 1000 Both systems use the same names for magnitudes less than 109 Differences arise from the use of identical names for larger magnitudes For the same magnitude name n illion the value is 103n 3 in the short scale but 106n in the long scale for positive integers n In some languages the long scale uses additional names for the intermediate multipliers replacing the ending ion with iard for example the next multiplier after million is milliard 109 after a billion it is billiard 1015 Hence a long scale n illiard equals 106n 3 The following table shows the size of first few short and long scale magnitudes Notice how billion and trillion are in both scales but have different sizes Quantity Short scale Long scale106 million million109 billion milliard1012 trillion billion1015 quadrillion billiard1018 quintillion trillion1021 sextillion trilliardComparisonThe following tables shows corresponding names and values of the two scales Note that instead of using an intermediate long scale word illiard a quantity is sometimes specified in terms of the smaller illion word For example thousand billion instead of billiard Value Metric prefix Short scale Long scale1 one one10 deca ten ten102 hecto hundred hundred103 kilo thousand thousand106 mega million million109 giga billion or milliard milliard1012 tera trillion billion1015 peta quadrillion billiard1018 exa quintillion trillion1021 zetta sextillion trilliard1024 yotta septillion quadrillion1027 ronna octillion quadrilliard1030 quetta nonillion quintillion The different sizes of the same names of the two scales can be described as Name Short scale Long scalemillion 106 106billion 109 1012trillion 1012 1018quadrillion 1015 1024quintillion 1018 1030 Avoiding confusionOne way to avoid confusion between the two scales is to use positional notation For example 1 000 000 000 000 rather than 1 trillion short scale or 1 billion long scale This method becomes unwieldy for very large numbers Combinations of the unambiguous words such as ten hundred thousand and million For example one thousand million and one million million Scientific notation for example 1 1010 or its engineering notation variant for example 10 109 or the computing variant E notation for example 1e10 This is the most common practice among scientists and mathematicians SI metric prefixes For example giga for 109 and tera for 1012 can give gigawatt 109 W and terawatt 1012 W Use with non SI units is unambiguous For example giga dollars megabucks k and M HistoryAlthough this situation has been developing since the 1200s the first recorded use of the terms short scale French echelle courte and long scale French echelle longue was by the French mathematician Genevieve Guitel in 1975 The short scale was never widespread before its general adoption in the United States It has been taught in American schools since the early 1800s It has since become common in other English speaking nations and several other countries For most of the 19th and early 20th centuries the United Kingdom largely used the long scale whereas the United States used the short scale so that the two systems were often referred to as British and American in the English language After several decades of increasing informal British usage of the short scale in 1974 the government of the UK adopted it and it is used for all official purposes The British usage and American usage are now identical The existence of the different scales means that care must be taken when comparing large numbers between languages or countries or when interpreting old documents in countries where the dominant scale has changed over time For example British English French and Italian historical documents can refer to either the short or long scale depending on the date of the document since each of the three countries has used both systems at various times in its history Today the United Kingdom officially uses the short scale but France and Italy use the long scale The pre 1974 former British English word billion post 1961 current French word billion post 1994 current Italian word bilione Spanish billon German Billion Dutch biljoen Danish billion Swedish biljon Finnish biljoona Slovenian bilijon Polish bilion and European Portuguese word biliao with a different spelling to the Brazilian Portuguese variant but in Brazil referring to short scale all refer to 1012 being long scale terms Therefore each of these words translates to the American English or post 1974 British English word trillion 1012 in the short scale and not billion 109 in the short scale On the other hand the pre 1961 former French word billion pre 1994 former Italian word bilione Brazilian Portuguese word bilhao and Welsh word biliwn all refer to 109 being short scale terms Each of these words translates to the American English or post 1974 British English word billion 109 in the short scale The term billion originally meant 1012 when introduced In long scale countries milliard was defined to its current value of 109 leaving billion at its original 1012 value and so on for the larger numbers Some of these countries but not all introduced new words billiard trilliard etc as intermediate terms In some short scale countries milliard was defined to 109 and billion dropped altogether with trillion redefined down to 1012 and so on for the larger numbers In many short scale countries milliard was dropped altogether and billion was redefined down to 109 adjusting downwards the value of trillion and all the larger numbers The root mil in million does not refer to the numeral 1 The word million derives from the Old French milion from the earlier Old Italian milione an intensification of the Latin word mille a thousand That is a million is a big thousand much as a great gross is a dozen gross or 12 144 1728 The word milliard or its translation is found in many European languages and is used in those languages for 109 However it is not found in American English which uses billion and not used in British English which preferred to use thousand million before the current usage of billion The financial term yard which derives from milliard is used on financial markets as unlike the term billion it is internationally unambiguous and phonetically distinct from million Likewise many long scale countries use the word billiard or similar for one thousand long scale billions i e 1015 and the word trilliard or similar for one thousand long scale trillions i e 1021 etc Timeline Date Event13th century The word million was not used in any language before the 13th century The monk and polymath Maximus Planudes c 1260 1305 was among the first recorded users of the word to document Mediterranean trade between Constantinople and Italian states Over the next two centuries the term became widely accepted and was adopted by other Italian states France and other European countries Late 14th century Piers Plowman a 17th century copy of the original 14th century allegorical narrative poem by William Langland The word million entered the English language One of the earliest references is William Langland s Piers Plowman written c 1360 1387 in Middle English with Coueyte not his goodes For millions of moneye Translation Covet not his goods for millions of money1475 French mathematician Jehan Adam writing in Middle French recorded the words bymillion and trimillion as meaning 1012 and 1018 respectively in a manuscript Traicte en arismetique pour la practique par gectouers now held in the Bibliotheque Sainte Genevieve in Paris item noctes que le premier greton dembas vault ung le second vault dix le trois vault cent le quart vult sic mille le Ve vault dix M le VIe vault cent M le VIIe vault Milion Le VIIIe vault dix Million Le IXe vault cent Millions Le Xe vault Mil Millions Le XIe vault dix mil Millions Le XIIe vault Cent mil Millions Le XIIIe vault bymillion Le XIIIIe vault dix bymillions Le XVe vault cent mil sic bymillions Le XVIe vault mil bymillions Le XVIIe vault dix Mil bymillions Le XVIIIe vault cent mil bymillions Le XIXe vault trimillion Le XXe vault dix trimillions Translation Likewise note that the first counter from the bottom is worth one the 2nd is worth ten the 3rd is worth one hundred the 4th is worth one thousand the 5th is worth ten thousand the 6th is worth one hundred thousand the 7th is worth a million the 8th is worth ten millions the 9th is worth one hundred millions the 10th is worth one thousand millions the 11th is worth ten thousand millions the 12th is worth one hundred thousand million the 13th is worth a bymillion the 14th is worth ten bymillions the 15th is worth one hundred bymillions the 16th is worth one thousand bymillions the 17th is worth ten thousand bymillions the 18th is worth hundred thousand bymillions the 19th is worth a trimillion the 20th is worth ten trimillions 1484 Le Triparty en la Science des Nombres par Maistre Nicolas Chuquet Parisien an extract from Chuquet s original 1484 manuscript French mathematician Nicolas Chuquet in his article Le Triparty en la Science des Nombres par Maistre Nicolas Chuquet Parisien used the words byllion tryllion quadrillion quyllion sixlion septyllion ottyllion and nonyllion to refer to 1012 1018 1054 Most of the work was copied without attribution by Estienne de La Roche and published in his 1520 book L arismetique Chuquet s original article was rediscovered in the 1870s and then published for the first time in 1880 preder s Item l on doit savoir que ung million vault mille milliers de unitez et ung byllion vault mille milliers de millions et ung tryllion vault mille milliers de byllions et ung quadrillion vault mille milliers de tryllions et ainsi des aultres Et de ce en est pose ung exemple nombre divise et punctoye ainsi que devant est dit tout lequel nombre monte 745324 tryllions 804300 byllions 700023 millions 654321 Exemple 745324 8043000 700023 654321 sic Translation likewise one should know that a million is worth a thousand thousand units and a byllion is worth a thousand thousand millions and tryllion is worth a thousand thousand byllions and a quadrillion is worth a thousand thousand tryllions and so on for the others And an example of this follows a number divided up and punctuated as previously described the whole number being 745324 tryllions 804300 byllions 700023 millions 654321 Example 745324 8043000 700023 654321 sic The extract from Chuquet s manuscript the transcription and translation provided here all contain an original mistake one too many zeros in the 804300 portion of the fully written out example 745324 8043000 700023 654321 1516 Guilielmus Budaeus or Guillaume Bude 1467 1540 French mathematician Budaeus Guillaume Bude writing in Latin used the term milliart to mean ten myriad myriad or 109 in his book De Asse et partibus eius Libri quinque hoc est decem myriadum myriadas quod vno verbo nostrates abaci studiosi Milliartum appellant quasi millionum millionem Translation this is ten myriad myriads which in one word our students of numbers call Milliart as if a million millions1549 The influential French mathematician Jacques Pelletier du Mans used the name milliard or milliart to mean 1012 attributing the term to the earlier usage by Guillaume Bude17th century With the increased usage of large numbers the traditional punctuation of large numbers into six digit groups evolved into three digit group punctuation In some places the large number names were then applied to the smaller numbers following the new punctuation scheme Thus in France and Italy some scientists then began using billion to mean 109 trillion to mean 1012 etc This usage formed the origins of the later short scale The majority of scientists either continued to say thousand million or changed the meaning of the Pelletier term milliard from million of millions down to thousand million This meaning of milliard has been occasionally used in England but was widely adopted in France Germany Italy and the rest of Europe for those keeping the original long scale billion from Adam Chuquet and Pelletier 1676 The first published use of milliard as 109 occurred in the Netherlands milliart ofte duysent millioenen Translation milliart also thousand millions 1729 The short scale meaning of the term billion had already been brought to the British American colonies The first American appearance of the short scale value of billion as 109 was published in the Greenwood Book of 1729 written anonymously by Prof Isaac Greenwood of Harvard College Late 18th century As early as 1762 and through at least the early 20th century the dictionary of the Academie francaise defined billion as a term of arithmetic meaning a thousand millions Early 19th century France widely converted to the short scale and was followed by the U S which began teaching it in schools Many French encyclopedias of the 19th century either omitted the long scale system or called it desormais obsolete a now obsolete system Nevertheless by the mid 20th century France would officially convert back to the long scale 1926 A Dictionary of Modern English Usage by H W FowlerH W Fowler s A Dictionary of Modern English Usage noted It should be remembered that billion does not mean in American use which follows the French what it means in British For to us it means the second power of a million i e a million millions 1 000 000 000 000 for Americans it means a thousand multiplied by itself twice or a thousand millions 1 000 000 000 what we call a milliard Since billion in our sense is useless except to astronomers it is a pity that we do not conform Although American English usage did not change within the next 50 years French usage changed from short scale to long and British English usage changed from long scale to short 1948 The 9th General Conference on Weights and Measures received requests to establish an International System of Units One such request was accompanied by a draft French Government discussion paper which included a suggestion of universal use of the long scale inviting the short scale countries to return or convert This paper was widely distributed as the basis for further discussion The matter of the International System of Units was eventually resolved at the 11th General Conference in 1960 The question of long scale versus short scale was not resolved and does not appear in the list of any conference resolutions 1960 The 11th General Conference on Weights and Measures adopted the International System of Units SI with its own set of numeric prefixes SI is therefore independent of the number scale being used SI also notes the language dependence of some larger number names and advises against using ambiguous terms such as billion trillion etc The National Institute of Standards and Technology within the US also considers that it is best that they be avoided entirely 1961 The French Government confirmed their official usage of the long scale in the Journal officiel the official French Government gazette 1974 British prime minister Harold Wilson 1916 1995 British prime minister Harold Wilson explained in a written answer to the House of Commons that UK government statistics would from then on use the short scale reported in Hansard for 20 December 1974 Mr Maxwell Hyslop asked the Prime Minister whether he would make it the practice of his administration that when Ministers employ the word billion in any official speeches documents or answers to Parliamentary Questions they will to avoid confusion only do so in its British meaning of 1 million million and not in the sense in which it is used in the United States of America which uses the term billion to mean 1 000 million The Prime Minister No The word billion is now used internationally to mean 1 000 million and it would be confusing if British Ministers were to use it in any other sense I accept that it could still be interpreted in this country as 1 million million and I shall ask my colleagues to ensure that if they do use it there should be no ambiguity as to its meaning The BBC and other UK mass media quickly followed the government s lead within the UK During the last quarter of the 20th century most other English speaking countries Ireland Australia New Zealand South Africa Zimbabwe etc either also followed this lead or independently switched to the short scale use However in most of these countries some limited long scale use persists and the official status of the short scale use is not clear 1975 French mathematician Genevieve Guitel introduced the terms long scale French echelle longue and short scale French echelle courte to refer to the two numbering systems 1994 The Italian Government confirmed their official usage of the long scale Current usageShort and long scale usage throughout the world Long scale Short scale Short scale with milliard instead of billion Both scales Other naming system No dataShort scale users English speaking 106 one million 109 one billion 1012 one trillion etc Most English language countries and regions use the short scale with 109 being billion For example Australia Canada English speaking see Using both below Ireland English speaking Irish billiun trilliun United Kingdom United States Arabic speaking 106 م ل ي و ن malyoon 109 م ل ي ار milyar 1012 ت ر ل ي و ن tirilyoon etc Most Arabic language countries and regions use the short scale with 109 being مليار milyar except for a few countries like Saudi Arabia and the UAE which use the word بليون billion for 109 For example Algeria Egypt Iraq Morocco Saudi Arabia United Arab Emirates Other short scale 106 one million 109 one milliard or one billion 1012 one trillion etc Other countries also use a word similar to trillion to mean 1012 etc Whilst a few of these countries like English use a word similar to billion to mean 109 most like Arabic have kept a traditionally long scale word similar to milliard for 109 Some examples of short scale use and the words used for 109 and 1012 are Brazil Brazilian Portuguese bilhao trilhao Indonesia miliar triliun Israel Hebrew מיליארד milyard טריליון trilyon Russia milliard milliard trillion trillion Turkey milyar trilyon Long scale users The long scale is used by most Continental European countries and by most other countries whose languages derive from Continental Europe with the notable exceptions of Albania Greece Romania and Brazil These countries use a word similar to billion to mean 1012 Some use a word similar to milliard to mean 109 while others use a word or phrase equivalent to thousand millions Dutch speaking 106 miljoen 109 miljard 1012 biljoen etc Most Dutch language countries and regions use the long scale with 109 miljard French speaking 106 million 109 milliard 1012 billion etc Most French language countries and regions use the long scale with 109 milliard for example Canada Canadian French see Using both below FranceGerman speaking 106 Million 109 Milliarde 1012 Billion etc German language countries and regions use the long scale with 109 Milliarde Portuguese speaking 106 milhao 109 mil milhoesormilhar de milhoes 1012 biliao With the notable exception of Brazil a short scale country most Portuguese language countries and regions use the long scale with 109 mil milhoes or milhar de milhoes Spanish speaking 106 millon 109 mil millones or millardo 1012 billon etc Most Spanish language countries and regions use the long scale for example Argentina Mexico mil millones or millardo Spain millardo or typ mil millones Other long scale 106 one million 109 one milliard or one thousand million 1012 one billion etc Some examples of long scale use and the words used for 109 and 1012 are Iran Persian میلیارد miliyard بیلیون billion تریلیون trillion citation needed Italy miliardo bilione Poland miliard bilion Switzerland French milliard billion German Milliarde Billion Italian miliardo bilione Romansh milliarda billiun Using both Some countries use either the short or long scales depending on the internal language being used or the context 106 one million 109 either one billion short scale or one milliard thousand million long scale 1012 either one trillion short scale or one billion long scale etc Country or territory Short scale usage Long scale usage Canada Canadian English 109 billion 1012 trillion Canadian French 109 milliard 1012 billion or mille milliards Mauritius Seychelles Vanuatu English 109 billion 1012 trillion French 109 milliard 1012 billion Namibia South Africa South African English 109 billion 1012 trillion Afrikaans 109 miljard 1012 biljoen Puerto Rico Economic and technical 109 billon 1012 trillon Latin American export publications 109 millardo or mil millones 1012 billon Using neither The following countries use naming systems for large numbers that are not etymologically related to the short and long scales Country Number system Naming of large numbers Bangladesh India Maldives Nepal Pakistan Indian numbering system Traditional system for everyday use but short or long scale may also be in use Bhutan Dzongkha numerals Traditional system Cambodia Khmer numerals Traditional system People s Republic of China Republic of China South Korea North Korea Japan East Asian numbering system Chinese numeralsKorean numeralsJapanese numerals Traditional myriad system for the larger numbers special words and symbols up to 1068 Greece Calque of the short scale Names of the short scale have not been loaned but calqued into Greek based on the native Greek word for million ekatommyrio ekatommyrio hundred myriad i e 100 10 000 disekatommyrio disekatommyrio bi hundred myriad 109 short scale billion trisekatommyrio trisekatommyrio tri hundred myriad 1012 short scale trillion tetrakis ekatommyrio tetrakis ekatommyrio quadri hundred myriad 1015 short scale quadrillion and so on Laos Lao numerals Traditional system Mongolia Mongolian numerals Traditional myriad system for the larger numbers special words up to 1067 Sri Lanka Sinhala numeralsTamil numerals Traditional systems Thailand Thai numerals Traditional system based on millions Vietnam Vietnamese numerals Traditional system s based on thousandsBy continent The long and short scales are both present on most continents with usage dependent on the language used For example Continent Short scale usage Long scale usageAfrica Arabic Egypt Libya South African English French Benin Guinea Portuguese Mozambique North America American English Canadian English Canadian French Mexican Spanish U S SpanishSouth America Brazilian Portuguese English Guyana American Spanish Dutch Suriname French French Guiana Antarctica Australian English British English New Zealand English Russian American Spanish Argentina Chile French France Norwegian Norway Asia Hebrew Israel Indonesian Philippine English Persian Iran Portuguese East Timor Macau Europe British English Russian Turkish Dutch French German Italian Portuguese SpanishOceania Australian English New Zealand English French French Polynesia New Caledonia Notes on current usage Short scale English language countries Apart from the United States the long scale was used for centuries in many English language countries before being superseded in recent times by short scale usage Because of this history some long scale use persists and the official status of the short scale in anglophone countries other than the UK and US is sometimes obscure Australian usage In Australia education media outlets and literature all use the short scale in line with other English speaking countries The current recommendation by the Australian Government Department of Finance and Deregulation formerly known as AusInfo and the legal definition is the short scale As recently as 1999 the same department did not consider short scale to be standard but only used it occasionally Some documents use the term thousand million for 109 in cases where two amounts are being compared using a common unit of one million British usage Billion has meant 109 in most sectors of official published writing for many years now The UK government the BBC and most other broadcast or published mass media have used the short scale in all contexts since the mid 1970s Before the widespread use of billion for 109 UK usage generally referred to thousand million rather than milliard The long scale term milliard for 109 is obsolete in British English though its derivative yard is still used as slang in the London money foreign exchange and bond markets American usage In the United States the short scale has been taught in school since the early 19th century It is therefore used exclusively Arabic language countries Most Arabic language countries use 106 مليون million 109 مليار milyar 1012 ترليون trilyon etc Indonesian usage Large numbers are common in Indonesia in part because its currency rupiah is generally expressed in large numbers the lowest common circulating denomination is Rp100 with Rp1000 is considered as base unit The term juta equivalent to million 106 is generally common in daily life Indonesia officially employs the term miliar derived from the long scale Dutch word miljard for the number 109 with no exception For 1012 and greater Indonesia follows the short scale thus 1012 is named triliun The term seribu miliar a thousand milliards or more rarely sejuta juta a million millions or sejuta berkali kali a millions after a million or a millions over a million are also used for 1012 less often Terms greater than triliun are not very familiar to Indonesians Long scale French usage France with Italy was one of two European countries which converted from the long scale to the short scale during the 19th century but returned to the original long scale during the 20th century In 1961 the French Government confirmed their long scale status However the 9th edition of the dictionary of the Academie francaise describes billion as an outdated synonym of milliard and says that the new meaning of 1012 was decreed in 1961 but never caught on Spanish language countries Spanish speaking countries sometimes use millardo milliard for 109 but mil millones thousand millions is used more frequently The word billon is sometimes used in the short scale sense in those countries more influenced by the United States where billion means one thousand millions The usage of billon to mean one thousand millions controversial from the start was denounced by the Royal Spanish Academy as recently as 2010 but was finally accepted in a later version of the official dictionary as standard usage among educated Spanish speakers in the United States including Puerto Rico Italian usage Italy with France was one of the two European countries which partially converted from the long scale to the short scale during the 19th century but returned to the original long scale in the 20th century In 1994 the Italian Government confirmed its long scale status In Italian the word bilione officially means 1012 trilione means 1018 etc Colloquially bilione can mean both 109 and 1012 trilione citation needed can mean both 1012 and rarer 1018 and so on Therefore in order to avoid ambiguity they are seldom used Forms such as miliardo milliard for 109 mille miliardi a thousand milliards for 1012 un milione di miliardi a million milliards for 1015 un miliardo di miliardi a milliard of milliards for 1018 mille miliardi di miliardi a thousand milliard of milliards for 1021 are more common Both long and short scale Canadian usage Both scales are in use currently in Canada English speaking regions use the short scale exclusively while French speaking regions use the long scale though the Canadian government standards website recommends that in French billion and trillion be avoided recommending milliard for 109 and mille milliards a thousand milliards for 1012 South African usage South Africa uses both the long scale in Afrikaans and sometimes English and the short scale in English Unlike the 1974 UK switch the switch from long scale to short scale took time As of 2011 update most English language publications use the short scale Some Afrikaans publications briefly attempted usage of the American System but that has led to comment in the papers and has been disparaged by the Taalkommissie The Afrikaans Language Commission of the South African Academy of Science and Art and has thus to most appearances been abandoned Neither long nor short scale Indian Pakistani and Bangladeshi usage Outside of financial media the use of billion by Bangladeshi Indian and Pakistani English speakers highly depends on their educational background Some may continue to use the traditional British long scale In everyday life Bangladeshis Indians and Pakistanis largely use their own common number system commonly referred to as the Indian numbering system for instance Bangladeshi Pakistani and Indian English commonly use the words lakh to denote 100 thousand crore to denote ten million i e 100 lakhs and arab to denote thousand million See alsoGoogol number Googolplex number Names of large numbers Names of small numbers Orders of magnitude numbers Hindu units of time which displays some similar issues Indian numbering systemReferencesGuitel Genevieve 1975 Histoire comparee des numerations ecrites in French Paris Flammarion pp 51 52 ISBN 978 2 08 211104 1 Guitel Genevieve 1975 Les grands nombres en numeration parlee Etat actuel de la question i e The large numbers in oral numeration Present state of the question Histoire comparee des numerations ecrites in French Paris Flammarion pp 566 574 ISBN 978 2 08 211104 1 Authoritative Real Academia Espanola RAE dictionary billon Archived from the original on 4 November 2015 Retrieved 12 March 2015 British English usage of Billion vs Thousand million vs Milliard Google Inc Retrieved 26 April 2014 via Google Books ngram viewer BBC GCSE Bitesize The origins of the universe BBC Retrieved 28 July 2011 Resolution 12 of the 11th meeting of the CGPM 1960 BIPM Retrieved 28 July 2011 Smith David Eugene 1953 first published 1925 History of Mathematics Vol II Courier Dover Publications p 81 ISBN 978 0 486 20430 7 Fowler H W 1926 A Dictionary of Modern English Usage Great Britain Oxford University Press pp 52 53 ISBN 978 0 19 860506 5 BILLION DEFINITION HC Deb 20 December 1974 vol 883 cc711W 712W Hansard Written Answers Parliamentary Debates Hansard 20 December 1972 Retrieved 2 April 2009 O Donnell Frank 30 July 2004 Britain s 1 trillion debt mountain How many zeros is that The Scotsman Retrieved 31 January 2008 Who wants to be a trillionaire BBC News 7 May 2007 Retrieved 11 May 2010 Comrie Bernard 24 March 1996 billion summary Linguist List Mailing list Retrieved 24 July 2011 Oxford Dictionaries How many is a billion Oxford University Press Archived from the original on 12 January 2017 Retrieved 7 May 2018 Oxford Dictionaries Billion Oxford University Press Archived from the original on 11 August 2011 Retrieved 24 July 2011 Nielsen Ron 2006 The Little Green Handbook Macmillan Publishers p 290 ISBN 978 0 312 42581 4 Wortschatz Lexikon Milliarde in German Universitat Leipzig Wortschatz Lexikon Archived from the original on 27 September 2011 Retrieved 19 August 2011 Wortschatz Lexikon Billion in German Universitat Leipzig Wortschatz Lexikon Archived from the original on 7 August 2011 Retrieved 19 August 2011 Wortschatz Lexikon Billiarde in German Universitat Leipzig Wortschatz Lexikon Archived from the original on 27 September 2011 Retrieved 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delle Scienze Matematische e Fisische in Middle French XIII 1880 Bologna Aristide Marre 593 594 ISSN 1123 5209 Retrieved 17 July 2011 Chuquet Nicolas 1880 written 1484 Le Triparty en la Science des Nombres par Maistre Nicolas Chuquet Parisien in Middle French miakinen net Retrieved 1 March 2008 Flegg Graham 23 30 December 1976 Tracing the origins of One Two Three New Scientist 72 1032 Reed Business Information 747 ISSN 0262 4079 Retrieved 17 July 2011 permanent dead link Budaeus Guilielmus 1516 De Asse et partibus eius Libri quinque in Latin pp folio 93 Littre Emile 1873 1874 Dictionnaire de la langue francaise Paris France L Hachette p 347 Ce n est qu au milieu du XVIIe siecle qu il fut regle que les tranches au lieu d etre de six en six chiffres seraient de trois en trois chiffres ce qui revint a diviser par 1000 l ancien billion l ancien trillion etc It was only in the middle of the 17th century that it was settled that the slices instead of being from six to six digits would be 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2012 Robson S O Stuart O Singgih Wibisono Yacinta Kurniasih Javanese English dictionary Tuttle Publishing 2002 ISBN 0 7946 0000 X 821 pages Avram Mioara Sala Marius 2000 May We Introduce the Romanian Language to You Editura Fundatiei Culturale Romane p 151 ISBN 9789735772246 the numeral miliard billion De Geintegreerde Taal Bank miljard in Dutch Instituut voor Nederlandse Lexicologie Retrieved 19 August 2011 De Geintegreerde Taal Bank biljoen in Dutch Instituut voor Nederlandse Lexicologie Retrieved 19 August 2011 French Larousse milliard in French Editions Larousse Archived from the original on 18 March 2012 Retrieved 19 August 2011 French Larousse billion in French Editions Larousse Archived from the original on 18 March 2012 Retrieved 19 August 2011 billion Dictionnaire de l Academie francaise in French 9th ed Academie francaise 1992 Retrieved 17 January 2016 BILLION les deux l se prononcent sans mouillure n m XVe siecle byllion un million de millions XVIe siecle mille millions Alteration arbitraire de l initiale de million d apres la particule latine bi deux fois Rare Mille millions Syn vieilli de Milliard Selon un decret de 1961 le mot Billion a recu une nouvelle valeur a savoir un million de millions 1012 qui n est pas entree dans l usage BILLION the two Ls are pronounced without palatalisation masculine noun Spelled byllion in the 15th century when it meant a million millions in the 16th century it meant a thousand millions It is an arbitrary alteration of the start of million by inserting the Latin prefix bi meaning twice Now rarely used It means a thousand millions It is an outdated synonym of Milliard According to a decree of 1961 the word Billion received a new value to wit a million millions 1012 which has not come into common usage permanent dead link Diccionario Panhispanico de Dudas millardo in Spanish Real Academia Espanola Retrieved 19 August 2011 Diccionario Panhispanico de Dudas billon in Spanish Real Academia Espanola Retrieved 24 July 2010 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External linksBBC News article Is trillion the new billion Live Counter com How to visualize large numbers