Citations:millillion

Hello, you have come here looking for the meaning of the word Citations:millillion. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word Citations:millillion, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say Citations:millillion in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word Citations:millillion you have here. The definition of the word Citations:millillion will help you to be more precise and correct when speaking or writing your texts. Knowing the definition ofCitations:millillion, as well as those of other words, enriches your vocabulary and provides you with more and better linguistic resources.

English citations of millillion

1853 1859 1860 1876 1917 1920 1976 1992 1996 2006 2007 2020 2022
ME « 15th c. 16th c. 17th c. 18th c. 19th c. 20th c. 21st c.
  • 1853, The Ohio Journal of Education, Vol. II, No. 6, page 218:
    The million multiplied by the million, makes the bi-million, or, contracted, the billion, the second power of the million; the tri-million or trillion, the third power of the million; the quadrillion, the fourth power of the million; and so on, even up to the millillion, the 1000th power of the million, or a regular series of 6006 figures entering into the English notation and numeration.
  • 1853, The Ohio Journal of Education, Vol. II, No. 6, page 221:
    The trigintillion comprehends 31 periods, or 186 digits or figures; the centillion, 101 periods, or 606 figures; the millillion, 1001 periods, or 6006 digits or figures—high enough, jet not limited.
  • 1859, Alfred Holbrook, The Normal:
    104th, Duocentillions, etc. 202d, Duocentillions, etc. 1002d, Millillions, etc.
  • 1860, The Ohio Educational Monthly, volume 9, pages 151-152:
    Thomson writes “Tredecillions,” and Tracy “Tridicillions.” Holbrook, in his Normal, gives Tridecillions, Quadrodecillions, Quindecillions, Sexdecillions, Octodecillions, Nonodecillions, Vigintillions, Unvigintillions, Duo-vigintillions, Trigintillions, Quadrogintillions, Quingintillions, Sexagintillions, Septaugintillions, Octogintillions, Nonogintillions, Centillions, Uncentillions, Duocentillions, and Millillions.
  • 1876, The Ohio Educational Monthly, volume 25, pages 192-193:
    unvingintillions (21st), duo-vingintillions (22nd), etc., trigintillions (30th), quadrogintillions (40th), quingintillions (50th), sexagintillions (60th), septuagintillions (70th), octogintillions (80th), ninogentillions (90th), centillions (100th), uncentillions (101st), duocentillions (102nd), etc., duocentillions (200th), etc., millillions (1000th).
  • 1917, We Can't Have Everything, Harper & Brothers, page 579:
    Millillions!”
  • 1920, Rupert Hughs, What's the World Coming To?, Digitized edition, Harper & Brothers, published 2006, page 104:
    "Thass right, HT lady, always be p'lite to us old folks, and we'll always-zz leave you a millillion dollollars in our wills."
  • 1976, Albert Ross Eckler, Word Ways: The Journal of Recreational Linguistics:
    I propose to replace Candelaria's millillion (with log period 3000) by unillillion, his decilli-millillion (with log period 30000) by deci-unillillion, and his centilli-millillion (with log period 300000) by centi-unillillion.
  • 1992, The Dickson's word treasury, page 181:
    The list includes this sampling: quattuordecillion (45 zeros), novemdecillion (60 zeros), vigintillion (63 zeros), unovigintillion (66 zeros), trigintillion (93 zeros), quadragintillion (123 zeroes), centillion (303 zeros), ducentillion (603 zeros), millillion (3003 zeros), quadcento-millillion (4203 zeros), du-millillion (6003 zeros), dec-millillion (30,003 zeros), duvigint-millillion (66,0003 zeros), sexagint-millillion (180,003 zeros), trecent-millillion (900,003 zeros), billillion (3,000,003 zeros), trigint-billillion (60,000,003 zeros), and sexcent-billillion (1,800,000,003 zeros.)
  • 1996, Alfred Mitchell Bingham, The Tiffany Fortune: And Other Chronicles of a Connecticut Family, page 233:
    It must have been an older brother in the other bed, for I learned about a million, and went on to consider a billion and a trillion and a quadrillion, and so on to a “millillion,” and even that was not the end: the frightening notion of infinity came next.
  • 2006 December 12, “Math matters”, in Infinite Probability, WordPress:
    Reading the wikipedia entry on the subject has kindled a fascination with these sillily large numbers: a googolduplex is 10googolplex, or 1010^10^100. A googoltriplex adds an extra level of exponentiation. A googolyottaplex is a googolplex with a septillion extra levels of exponentiation. A millillion is 103003. A milli-millillion is 103000003.
  • 2007, Michael A. B. Deakin, Name of the Number, page 21:
    However, by the time we reach 1036, an undecillion, things are getting rather difficult. We finally run out shortly after 103003, which would be a millillion.
  • 2020, Vladimir Kishinets, Bio-revolution & Futurology:
    However, there are sufficienly well-founded predictions about the world cosmological processes on a nonhuman scale of trillions, decillions and millillions of years, which predict in one way or another the end of the existing universe.
  • 2022, Grace Anthony, Hong Mengchu Kai: The Son of Fate Who Controls the Great Tribulation:
    He was shocked, but his body only moved with a millillion of a spear.