How big is a billion? - Numberphile

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  • Опубліковано 5 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 10 тис.

  • @davidzahalka2766
    @davidzahalka2766 4 роки тому +244

    It's great to see how amazed he is by the word "Milliard". Greetings from the continental Europe.

  • @nickchamp2195
    @nickchamp2195 8 років тому +2884

    I'm Russian and I used to think Americans were crazy for thinking there are 7billion people in the world but now I understand why...

    • @edu-kt
      @edu-kt 8 років тому +94

      You got it right, not all of them, just trump supporters (batshit crazy).

    • @apw3ner
      @apw3ner 8 років тому +28

      +Eduardo Daniel Kucharsky Terrazas 7 billion trump supporters

    • @zacharyfilion1437
      @zacharyfilion1437 8 років тому +195

      You spelled Hillary wrong

    • @videochallenge.2557
      @videochallenge.2557 8 років тому +170

      Actually Russia does not use the word billion, it just goes
      million = 1.000.000
      milliard = 1.000.000.000
      trillion = 1.000.000.000.000

    • @dominiklukacs7677
      @dominiklukacs7677 8 років тому +21

      Sannesthesia Wow! In Hungary we use the long system. We have the milliard (milliárd) and so on. It's sometimes confusing because I'm learning English so on lessons I have to use two systems :-D

  • @davesardine
    @davesardine 5 років тому +603

    5:02 - "One is one, that's fine"
    Key takeaway from the entire video.

    • @jezus22
      @jezus22 5 років тому +3

      everything to the power of 0 is one

    • @photonicpizza1466
      @photonicpizza1466 4 роки тому +8

      @@jezus22 Except zero!

    • @jezus22
      @jezus22 4 роки тому +3

      @@photonicpizza1466 not quite, it can be 1 in some parts of the math like algebra, and in onther parts of math it can be undefined. anyway this is exceptional, and partialy you are correct.

    • @TatanAgustin
      @TatanAgustin 4 роки тому +9

      @@photonicpizza1466 He said 'everything'. Zero is nothing

    • @photonicpizza1466
      @photonicpizza1466 4 роки тому +3

      @@jezus22 "Except in algebra"? Algebra excludes it as well. The limit of 0^x as x→0 is 1, but 0^x by itself is always undefined. Not to mention, in complex algebra, it's also undefined even in terms of limits, as the limit from the imaginary axis is nonexistent.

  • @zkbrhodas8753
    @zkbrhodas8753 5 років тому +228

    Always got confused with this, you know, I’m Portuguese and speak Portuguese and we use the long system, but the Brazilians (who also speak Portuguese) use the short system

    • @DenzelLN936
      @DenzelLN936 4 роки тому +25

      ZKB rhodas wow I’ve never heard of a Brazilionaire

    • @PacificBird
      @PacificBird 4 роки тому +8

      How do you group orders of magnitude that don't have names with the long system? Like do you say "Dez mil milhão"? That has always seemed so clunky to me

    • @zkbrhodas8753
      @zkbrhodas8753 4 роки тому +8

      Pacific Bird dez mil milhões, yes and the brazilians skip directly to dez bilhões

    • @PacificBird
      @PacificBird 4 роки тому +2

      @@zkbrhodas8753 huh, alright fair enough. Other languages have a million, milliarde so I was unsure if European Portuguese had something similar.

    • @deathgamer8086
      @deathgamer8086 4 роки тому +1

      in china 1 billion has 8 zeros

  • @hauribest
    @hauribest 4 роки тому +469

    Anytime I see the word "trillion" in a news article in my country I'm 100% sure it's incorrectly translated from the English short system.

    • @janmatejkubik1987
      @janmatejkubik1987 4 роки тому +10

      Same :-)

    • @ferocentaur8859
      @ferocentaur8859 3 роки тому

      Both the long scale and short scale is a lie when it comes to a TRILLION. A million-billion should just be a million-billion, not a trillion. A trillion is from TRI+billion (tripple-billion, up from 'millions') as 1,000,000,000,000,000,000.

    • @Bronzescorpion
      @Bronzescorpion 3 роки тому +7

      @@ferocentaur8859 Why? It defeats the beautiful logic of the long system and it leaves several gaps in between that could be useful to have names for.
      You also seem confused, because the number you wrote (18 zeroes) is exactly the number trillion in the long system. A triple billion would be way larger, so either you like the long system or you are mistaken by your own system.

    • @Paultimate7
      @Paultimate7 3 роки тому +2

      A trillion is 1000 billion. How is that hard to understand?

    • @Cobalt_Spirit
      @Cobalt_Spirit 3 роки тому +38

      @@Paultimate7 And you did not watch the video.

  • @gryffin2347
    @gryffin2347 7 років тому +490

    I always thought until I was "corrected" in Year 8 maths that it was 1 million million = 1 billion 1 billion billion = trillion etc. I call it the longerer system.

    • @cigmorfil4101
      @cigmorfil4101 4 роки тому +31

      When I was at school, I was taught 1 billion = 1 million × 1 million...mind you, that was pre 1974.
      It makes much more sense as
      1 billion is 1 bi-million = 1 million^2
      1 trillion is 1 tri-million = 1 million^3
      The million is the base unit and the prefix ti indicate power is "merged into it"
      For the shirt scale it is based on powers of 1 thousand, giving
      1 thousand^2 = 1 bi-thousand = 1 bisand
      1 thousand^3 = 1 tri-thousand = 1 trisand
      etc.
      Totally clears up any possible error in understanding the size of the number (and the number of zeros is obvious from the merged prefix).

    • @purple_sky
      @purple_sky 4 роки тому +3

      Yeah I used to think this

    • @UltraCasualPenguin
      @UltraCasualPenguin 4 роки тому +8

      You meant 1 million billion = trillion, right? 1 billion billion = quadrillion.

    • @purple_sky
      @purple_sky 4 роки тому +12

      Janne Laitinen "I always thought"

    • @RH-ro3sg
      @RH-ro3sg 4 роки тому +3

      There actually is a system, very much like that, proposed by computer scientist Donald Knuth, even though it is based on myriads (10,000). It's called the -yllion system (wikipedia has an article on it)
      1 myriad= 10,000
      1 myllion = 1 myriad myriads = 1 myriad squared = 100,000,000 (= 10^8)
      1 byllion = 1 myllion myllions= 1 myllion squared = 10^16
      1 tryllion = 1 byllion byllions= 1 byllion squared = 10 ^32
      its chief advantage is that you get a lot more "ooomph" for each new prefix - one centyllion would take you up as far as 10^(2^102) = 10^ (5,070,602,400,912,917,605,986,812,821,404). Its drawback is that names get slightly more confusing. For example 6* 10^56 would become ' six myllion byllion tryllion', not to be confused with 'six tryllion (one) byllion (one) myllion' .

  • @theaslam9758
    @theaslam9758 4 роки тому +286

    I love how the thumbnail asks us if 1,000,000,000 is a billion or a trillion.
    But it is just a milliard.

    • @peterleadley7103
      @peterleadley7103 3 роки тому +2

      dutch

    • @needforspeedgaming7148
      @needforspeedgaming7148 3 роки тому +3

      Confused me aswell

    • @buhzs9663
      @buhzs9663 2 роки тому +4

      Technically a billion!

    • @muhilan8540
      @muhilan8540 2 роки тому +12

      yeah it’s a mistake he meant to write 1,000,000,000,000

    • @theaslam9758
      @theaslam9758 2 роки тому +3

      @@muhilan8540 damn, it's been 2 years, fsr i only got notified of your reply. Brings back memories of me binging numberphile.

  • @filipjirava8910
    @filipjirava8910 3 роки тому +31

    am i the only one who likes to see James' pure joy while talking about milliard?

  • @elkikex
    @elkikex 7 років тому +1112

    4:04 "Somebody just got it wrong, and it just, sort of, caught on" - Origin story for half of the things in America.

    • @ioakimantonis4687
      @ioakimantonis4687 7 років тому +2

      elkikex xD

    • @m4this
      @m4this 7 років тому +23

      Sadly... to true

    • @illusionistdave1
      @illusionistdave1 6 років тому +21

      *too

    • @muckerwood
      @muckerwood 6 років тому +28

      ...and yet America is and always will be the greatest nation in history. I love reading comments from the haters. Makes my day.

    • @markcorneliuslau
      @markcorneliuslau 6 років тому +35

      Except that both the short scale and the long scale were used in Europe before either was used in what would become the US.

  • @EmilMacko
    @EmilMacko 8 років тому +1224

    In danish it's:
    Million = 1,000,000
    Milliard = 1,000,000,000
    Billion = 1,000,000,000,000
    Billiard = 1,000,000,000,000,000

    • @balintkurucz7245
      @balintkurucz7245 8 років тому +96

      Same in Hungarian :)

    • @NecumNaTo
      @NecumNaTo 8 років тому +143

      Same in Czech. Seems like only Americans have to have something special :D

    • @karolin113
      @karolin113 8 років тому +204

      Same in German

    • @Kacper-qp8kg
      @Kacper-qp8kg 8 років тому +94

      Same in Poland

    • @Kacper-qp8kg
      @Kacper-qp8kg 8 років тому +39

      And then trillion and trilliard, it is more logocal, because bi = 2 and tri = 3 (milliard is 1).

  • @TheNinerion
    @TheNinerion 10 років тому +123

    I'm German and I noticed this many years ago while watching American news. the German word "Milliarde" corresponds to the American "Billion" and the German "Billion" corresponds to the American "Trillion."

    • @ronaldderooij1774
      @ronaldderooij1774 10 років тому +20

      The Dutch go with the Germans on this one: Billion is Miljard and Trillion is Biljoen.

    • @svantesandblom8447
      @svantesandblom8447 10 років тому +10

      Same in Sweden, we have the miljard and biljard, and i Think it's a great system

    • @ronaldderooij1774
      @ronaldderooij1774 10 років тому +4

      Svante Sandblom Well, there may be a difference. Where is your Biljoen. In the Netherlands Biljard is 1000 times Biljoen. S in NL o it looks like this. Miljoen x 1000 = Miljard x 1000 = Biljoen x 1000 = Biljard and that is as far as I learned to count at school...

    • @ronaldderooij1774
      @ronaldderooij1774 10 років тому

      ***** OMG...

    • @alexandraondrea3191
      @alexandraondrea3191 10 років тому +4

      Romania is using the long system as well. 'Million' is 'milion' and 'milliard' is 'miliard'. The billions are not really used, but they are 1000^2.
      'Murica is confusing.

  • @barryholt9564
    @barryholt9564 5 років тому +90

    When it gets to the really big numbers, in Ireland there are two camps - eg, "Does the government owe 'a Gazillion' Euros or 'a Gajillion' Euros"..?

  • @DjVortex-w
    @DjVortex-w 11 років тому +58

    The worst thing is when text is translated from English to a language that uses the long system (such as Finnish.) An inattentive/ignorant translator will make an error of three orders of magnitude when translating "billion".

  • @ZanxxYami
    @ZanxxYami 8 років тому +266

    In Germny we use the long system. And when u start to have english classes you're going to be heavy confused that people name numbers in such a different way.

    • @silphaer5353
      @silphaer5353 8 років тому +5

      Actually a lot of us in britain use the long system - Which I believe also originated in britain.

    • @htmlguy88
      @htmlguy88 8 років тому +2

      it's not it's just based on base 1000 instead of the hefty million.

    • @angelmendez-rivera351
      @angelmendez-rivera351 8 років тому +16

      htmlguy88 Yes, but it makes no logic to use base 1000 if the naming is base 1000000

    • @onecommunistboi
      @onecommunistboi 8 років тому +2

      Silphaer Really? Do you have proof?

    • @silphaer5353
      @silphaer5353 8 років тому +1

      About which point? For my second point, you may notice I say I BELIEVE it originated in Britain, I did not say I was certain. And for the first point I was basing on people whom I know personally, most of whom use the long (correct) system.

  • @GalacticLobster
    @GalacticLobster 8 років тому +154

    I'll add one more thing. I am from Slovakia and as you know some languages have masculine, feminine and gender neutral nouns and pronouns. Well in Slovakia we use the long system but here we alternate the genders in a way.
    A million is "milión", which makes it masculine (male) and a milliard is "miliarda". The "a" at the end of "miliarda" makes it feminine. Same goes for all the other ones: milón, miliarda, bilión, biliarda, trilión, triliarda...
    So from million up it always alternates masculine , feminine , masculine , feminine ....

    • @b4Bub0i
      @b4Bub0i 8 років тому +1

      same goes for germany, we have a "millionär" (milliorair) but male, and we have "millionärin" (same but female).

    • @egalomon
      @egalomon 8 років тому +35

      that's not what MisterShizno was talking about...

    • @tempestaspraefert
      @tempestaspraefert 8 років тому +15

      I'm sorry, but you don't appear to grasp this. He says that their 10^(6n) words are masculine and their 10^(6n + 3) are feminine (for n > 0), not that they have a masculine and feminine word for a millionaire/billionaire/...

    • @b4Bub0i
      @b4Bub0i 8 років тому +13

      +Tempestas Praefert ohhhh, yea got it :D thanks for telling me and not just saying I was wrong

    • @tempestaspraefert
      @tempestaspraefert 8 років тому +6

      You're welcome ;)

  • @CM-dx6xu
    @CM-dx6xu 6 років тому +938

    When English adopted America's system but America still uses imperial.
    Top 10 anime betrayals.

    • @moondust2365
      @moondust2365 5 років тому +28

      Although technically, Imperial system is England's system. That's why in my country calls them "English units" even though the U.K. doesn't use it anymore. My classmates even say "British people are just picky and like things fancy" and stuff like that...

    • @nathansmith3608
      @nathansmith3608 5 років тому +9

      we said we'd take their kilogram & we did. that one from France we keep in the Smithsonian or whatever..

    • @thehumungus9066
      @thehumungus9066 5 років тому +7

      Moondust2365 The British still use the Imperial system for the most part.

    • @moondust2365
      @moondust2365 5 років тому +1

      @@thehumungus9066 Really? Didn't know, but I guess it makes sense...

    • @EebstertheGreat
      @EebstertheGreat 5 років тому +21

      @@moondust2365 That's not correct. British people use the imperial system for some things and the metric system for other things, but the metric system definitely predominates, especially in younger generations. It's not at all like the U.S., where the customary units are overwhelmingly used in favor of metric units by most people.

  • @Kj16V
    @Kj16V 9 років тому +1175

    I use the "load" system:
    1 000 a load
    1 000 000 a shit load
    1 000 000 000 a fuck load
    1 000 000 000 000 a fuck off shit load
    This system works best for every day speaking, eg. Premiership footballers earn a shit load of money." Or: "the national debt of [country] is a fuck off shit load of dollars"

  • @Steppenkater
    @Steppenkater 8 років тому +1364

    Fahrenheit, Inches, Pounds and Billion.... America has a talent to use the most illogical and impractical systems you can have.

    • @octinhuh
      @octinhuh 8 років тому +95

      Hey, when the colonies were first formed, metric didn't exist, and when we eventually did try converting to metric, people were too used to it and flipped out. I'm upset too that we didn't switch.

    • @Liamj774
      @Liamj774 8 років тому +30

      SabertoothTigga / _TheRealAmeRicA Also expensive? Having to change every sign and roads etc would rack up a pretty penny

    • @joegillian314
      @joegillian314 8 років тому +30

      I used to think we should have switched a log time ago, but now I feel that it doesn't really matter because we can (and do) learn both systems side by side, so now it seems unnecessary. Although I admit that going between miles and kilometers is a pain.

    • @MrMartinNeumann
      @MrMartinNeumann 8 років тому +63

      It would be a one-time cost though.
      Compared to the continuous cost of having 2 systems (if you want to trade/collaborate with other countries) and the added complexity of the Imperial system.
      In canada engeneering companies charge 10-15% more if the work is done in Imperial.
      Companies in Australia that switched over where saving up to 10% in operating cost each year.

    • @htmlguy88
      @htmlguy88 8 років тому +4

      most of the US system is based on powers of two for a lot of conversions like there's 4 fluid ounces toa gill 2 gills to a cup 2 of those to a pint 4 of those to a liquid gallon. 2 of those to a peck. 4 of those to a bushel I think.

  • @MennoRooker
    @MennoRooker 8 років тому +20

    As a Dutch person who was always confused as to why our words to describe these numbers differed fron the English one, I now finally see that my country still enforces the most logical system. Great vid.

  • @ThomasPelk
    @ThomasPelk 5 років тому +211

    "Long System" supporter from Germany ;)

    • @Sir_Ninonino
      @Sir_Ninonino 3 роки тому +8

      A bit late to the party, but let me send support from Spain

    • @iZePlayz
      @iZePlayz 3 роки тому +3

      Long System supporter from Germany too.

    • @j.vonhogen9650
      @j.vonhogen9650 2 місяці тому +1

      Long System supporter from The Netherlands here!

  • @mariakhan6090
    @mariakhan6090 5 років тому +83

    7:59 whoa he quickly number-zoned the long system 😂😂😂

  • @larryalexander900
    @larryalexander900 7 років тому +419

    The way England's economy is going they won't have to worry about any of this.

    • @joshuathatcher8614
      @joshuathatcher8614 5 років тому +30

      Larry Alexander Depends on how much debt they get into.

    • @abbe1255
      @abbe1255 5 років тому +1

      Damn

    • @lazyperson7343
      @lazyperson7343 5 років тому +4

      I dont think they will be ok after the Brexit. I believe that they should stick to the EU because it benefits them.

    • @theaslam9758
      @theaslam9758 4 роки тому +4

      Φώτης Γεωργέλλης
      U mad? The EU takes money from Britain so we get nothing out of it

    • @lazyperson7343
      @lazyperson7343 4 роки тому +9

      @@theaslam9758 First of all by sticking with the EU the country will have a stronger connection with the other EU members. Also by being part of the EU offers a number of benefits to the english people such as easier travel to the other EU countries.

  • @Zero86Sk
    @Zero86Sk 5 років тому +51

    Slovakia uses the long system, so i was always confused with Milliard and Billion. Thank you for explaining this.

  • @richardbates1993
    @richardbates1993 5 років тому +302

    Can we align it to mega, giga , tera etc?

    • @patrickwilliams7496
      @patrickwilliams7496 5 років тому +24

      Mega=million giga=billion tera=trillion

    • @jayglenn837
      @jayglenn837 5 років тому +28

      But those are based on powers of two, not 10, aren't they?

    • @thomasfavrot4987
      @thomasfavrot4987 5 років тому +81

      Million is a number, and Mega is a unit prefix. And they are not based on power of two : a megameter is a thousand kilometer. There is another prefix for 2^10 : kibi, which is 1024, so a kibibyte is 1024 bytes. Which is different from a kilobyte...
      That's pretty confusing.
      Fun fact : if your hard drive says that it has only around 1.9GB left, and you check it's properties, you might see that it has actually 2.0×10^9 bytes. That is not a rounding mistake, it's just that GB are gibi bytes and not giga bytes...

    • @patrickwilliams7496
      @patrickwilliams7496 5 років тому +3

      @@thomasfavrot4987 its not 1024 its 1000

    • @patrickwilliams7496
      @patrickwilliams7496 5 років тому

      @@thomasfavrot4987 andvu like ur pwn comment dipshit

  • @livefromhollywood194
    @livefromhollywood194 8 років тому +257

    Why was I NEVER informed of this difference?

    • @livefromhollywood194
      @livefromhollywood194 8 років тому +3

      Get outta here andrew.... THIS IS MY DOMAIN....

    • @piluex2
      @piluex2 8 років тому +11

      livefromhollywood194 because you're from the US

    • @DavidKnowles0
      @DavidKnowles0 8 років тому +11

      I was never inform of the difference in the UK.

    • @s0rry494
      @s0rry494 8 років тому +23

      livefromhollywood194 because you have a minecraft profile picture

    • @iapr18
      @iapr18 7 років тому +3

      livefromhollywood194 Because "Gringolandia"

  • @klausolekristiansen2960
    @klausolekristiansen2960 8 років тому +65

    Here in Denmark, it is not at all unusual to see American billions mistranslated as "billion". So when seeing the word "billion" in a news item about forreign affairs, you have think about whether "milliard" or "billion" makes most sense in context.

    • @mojbeka
      @mojbeka 8 років тому +13

      same thing in germany

    • @Gonza-lh2vo
      @Gonza-lh2vo 7 років тому +20

      Journalists are the worst... We have the same problem in Latin America, they don't realize they have to transform American billions into thousand millions (or milliards). So you always have to assume they've translated it wrong.

    • @oz_jones
      @oz_jones Рік тому +3

      Same in Finland, but its exceedingly rare nowadays

  • @Henry14arsenal2007
    @Henry14arsenal2007 10 років тому +16

    The illogicity of the short system is quickly resolved if you consider the exponent as n+1, where n is the corresponding number in the naming convention, ie trillion = 1000^(3+1), billion = 1000^(2+1), etc. Short system is more convenient in that the name endings are consistent (-illion).

    • @tyrfinn8067
      @tyrfinn8067 10 років тому +9

      Name endings in the long system are also consistent... -iard or -illion

    • @TroggacomCactus
      @TroggacomCactus 10 років тому +3

      And they can be even more consistent by using "Thousand million" instead of "milliard."

    • @TimmehTRP
      @TimmehTRP 10 років тому

      ***** No reason for that, iard already states it's a thousand.

    • @TroggacomCactus
      @TroggacomCactus 10 років тому

      TimmehTRP Yes, but -iard and -illion might be a little too complex for some people (sadly) so having both names is helpful.

    • @TimmehTRP
      @TimmehTRP 10 років тому

      ***** Lol, too hard to remember, please tell me they don't actually say that? That's just making the american stereotype worse :o

  • @uhSighLimb
    @uhSighLimb 5 років тому +178

    I live in Canada and I can confirm how annoying it is to use both

    • @SirTylerGolf
      @SirTylerGolf 5 років тому +20

      I live in Canada and have never heard of the long system in my entire life, didn't even know it existed

    • @samtremblaybelzile
      @samtremblaybelzile 5 років тому +24

      Being Québécois I would use the long system in French and the short system in English. However I don't ever recall using the words trillion in English or billion in French, because at that point you're either using the tera prefix or just saying exponentials (10 to the 12, etc.).

    • @uhSighLimb
      @uhSighLimb 5 років тому +4

      I remember learning them both. Learning French I remember using the long form only, in English (once I reached high school) we used mostly the short form. Billiards and what not were only really used in specific lessons or by certain teachers. Other than that the short form was mostly adopted. I still here some people use the longer form idea. They’re usually more old fashioned lol.

    • @Qbe_Root
      @Qbe_Root 5 років тому +2

      I guess it doesn’t help that the words are the exact same in both languages, they just don’t stand for the same numbers

    • @Adahn99
      @Adahn99 4 роки тому +3

      Wait, so if you find a kindergarten mathematical problem which uses words instead of numbers and says something like:
      "A farmer goes to the market to sell 1 billion apples. He sells them to 1 thousand different merchants. How many apples does each merchant have?"
      Does it have two different right aswers for if the kid is used to one system or the other?

  • @javiersds8081
    @javiersds8081 6 років тому +42

    I'm from Spain and I was taught the 'long system' at school. It makes so much more sense.

  • @TheGodsrighthandman
    @TheGodsrighthandman 8 років тому +77

    English, born 1965, was taught that a billion was, indeed, 1,000,000,000,000.
    Took me donkeys years to get past us starting to use the US system and it STILL doesn't feel right!

    • @ronnielof7873
      @ronnielof7873 6 років тому +1

      The Gods Right-Hand Man Don't do it man. Rebel!

    • @snarkfinder2621
      @snarkfinder2621 6 років тому +7

      That is because it is NOT right. It was about time that the US system was abandoned and we re-aligned with the rest of the world.

    • @ICraigI
      @ICraigI 6 років тому +1

      Do you people not think about how this stuff if put in place could f*** up children's educations... Think about it your a young child and you learn a million is 100000 and a billion is 1000000000

    • @miguelsilva9118
      @miguelsilva9118 5 років тому

      @@ICraigI so?

  • @batfan1939
    @batfan1939 7 років тому +19

    I love that he underlined one letter in million, two for billion, three for trillion, four for quadrillion, and quintillion would be five. That means the first five number prefixes each have that number of letters.

    • @Anonymous-df8it
      @Anonymous-df8it 10 місяців тому +1

      Million doesn't have any root stemming from -mono, tho...

  • @joelformica8344
    @joelformica8344 5 років тому +103

    In Spanish it goes like this:
    10-diez
    100-cien
    1000-mil
    10.000-diez mil
    100.000-cien mil
    1.000.000-millón
    10.000.000-diez millones
    100.000.000-cien millones
    1.000.000.000-mil millones
    10.000.000.000-diez mil millones
    100.000.000.000-cien mil millones
    1.000.000.000.000-billón
    It uses the long system.
    You can clearly see a pattern in the names. It really shocked me and annoyed me when my English teacher told me about the short system. It just doesn’t make sense, it breaks the pattern.

    • @user-bg7ef4ns4v
      @user-bg7ef4ns4v 5 років тому +14

      German
      10 Zehn
      100 Hundert
      1.000 Tausend
      10.000 Zehn-tausend
      100.000 Hundert-Tausend
      *1.000.000 Eine Million(en)*
      10.000.000 Zehn Millionen
      100.000.000 Hundert Millionen
      *1.000.000.000 Eine Milliarde*
      10.000.000.000 Zehn Milliarden
      100.000.000.000 Hundert Milliarden
      *1.000.000.000.000 Eine Billion(en)*
      So it’s basically “MilliONen, MilliARDen, BilliONen, BilliARDen, TrilliONen, TrilliARDen, QuadrilliONen...” (each 1000 “-onen” are one “-arden” :P)

    • @misoslav_
      @misoslav_ 5 років тому +4

      @@user-bg7ef4ns4v Same for Czechia
      1 000 000 - milion
      1 000 000 000 - miliarda
      1 000 000 000 000 - bilion
      1 000 000 000 000 000 - biliarda
      10^18 - trilion
      10^21 - triliarda
      etc.

    • @BubbaJ18
      @BubbaJ18 5 років тому

      While it makes more since in Spanish class I learned a short system Spanish

    • @ogeidnomar4601
      @ogeidnomar4601 5 років тому +4

      Millardo also exists in Spanish. I think only Venezuela uses that word, but it means the same as a thousand million.

    • @franciscolevrino7085
      @franciscolevrino7085 5 років тому +3

      same happened to me. i´m from argentina and for me the short system makes no sense

  • @user-wb8pp4tk8c
    @user-wb8pp4tk8c 8 років тому +428

    standard form? it is called scientific notation where I live

    • @abc-ks8mm
      @abc-ks8mm 8 років тому +45

      Here in the UK it's called standard form. It's a mandatory part of science &/or maths in schools, now, too :/

    • @mrigayu
      @mrigayu 8 років тому +21

      Kris F Yes, that is another thing. I live in the United States, and we are taught scientific notation; standard form is used for different forms of writing functions.

    • @johannesvahlkvist
      @johannesvahlkvist 7 років тому +25

      ofcourse it is, a big number such as 100000000000000000000000000000000 has no meaning to a person, cause you cant count the zeroes and just know hat it's big, 10^32 is alot more understandable and takes up less space

    • @Svarsmannen
      @Svarsmannen 7 років тому +29

      Actually it's called Exponentialschreibweise ;-)

    • @emdivine
      @emdivine 7 років тому +32

      Hah, of course the Germans just go ahead and slap together the words for a description of the thing. I love it :3

  • @HDitzzDH
    @HDitzzDH 5 років тому +102

    In Swedish:
    10^0 = ett
    10^3 = 1 tusen
    10^6 = 1 miljon
    10^9 = 1 miljard
    10^12 = 1 biljon
    10^15 = 1 biljard
    10^18 = 1 triljon
    10^21 = 1 triljard
    etc...

    • @weeb69
      @weeb69 5 років тому +14

      Yeah it's the same in most of europe, I was very shocked when I realized that a "European" trillion is much more than the American trillion

    • @p3chv0gel22
      @p3chv0gel22 4 роки тому +16

      In Germany:
      10^0 Eins
      10^3 tausend
      10^6 Millionen
      10^9 Milliarden
      10^12 Billionen
      10^15 Billiarden
      10^18 Trillionen
      10^21 Trilliarde
      And so on

    • @wegmanjunior
      @wegmanjunior 4 роки тому +9

      Dutch:
      10^0 = één
      10^3 = 1 duizend
      10^6 = 1 miljoen
      10^9 = 1 miljard
      10^12 = 1 biljoen
      10^15 = 1 biljard
      10^18 = 1 triljoen
      10^21 = 1 triljard

    • @UltraCasualPenguin
      @UltraCasualPenguin 4 роки тому +4

      In Finnish:
      10³ = tuhat
      10⁶ = miljoona
      10⁹ = miljardi
      10¹² = biljoona
      10¹⁸ = triljoona
      Reason why we don't have name for 10¹⁵ is quite simple. Fastest of you probably quessed what name for it should be: biljardi.
      Problem is that we already use that word when we talk about cue sports.
      I think using it as name for 10¹⁵ wouldn't be issue because for example we use same word ("kuusi") for number 6 and it is Finnish translation for spruce.

    • @amadoucisse9143
      @amadoucisse9143 4 роки тому +2

      Een
      Duizend
      Miljoen
      Miljard
      Biljoen
      Biljard
      Triljoen
      Triljard

  • @stuartofblyth
    @stuartofblyth 8 років тому +371

    I look forward to the day when we avoid all confusion by using standard SI prefixes as we do in computing. So it would be £M1 (1 Megapound = £1,000,000), £G1 (1 Gigapound = £1,000,000,000) etc in the same way that we have 1 Megabyte and 1 Gigabyte etc

    • @freshrockpapa-e7799
      @freshrockpapa-e7799 8 років тому +12

      "Megapound" is not anything. You simply can't do that.

    • @stuartofblyth
      @stuartofblyth 8 років тому +137

      But - I did.

    • @MareeStone798ms
      @MareeStone798ms 8 років тому +36

      I like it. It does away with all those pesky zeroes :)

    • @reubenfrench6288
      @reubenfrench6288 8 років тому +60

      Except a megabyte is 1048576 bytes and a gigabyte is 1073741824 bytes.

    • @stuartofblyth
      @stuartofblyth 8 років тому +9

      Agreed - didn't clock that until after posting and have been ruing it ever since. Still, it's the use of the prefixes that's important. Make sure your annual salary is in computer kilopounds ...

  • @pajordan
    @pajordan 3 роки тому +13

    I love this! Not sure I ever learned of the long scale before. It makes loads more sense. Fascinated by all of this, including the Greek tidbit at the end. Cheers!

    • @DecontructRecreate
      @DecontructRecreate 2 роки тому +1

      As a Greek, I too was surprised by that nod. And he is absolutely correct. In Greek, it’s εκατομμύριο (εκατό - 100, μυριο - myriad) and δισεκατομμύριο (δις - bi, etc)

  • @juniorlks1
    @juniorlks1 4 роки тому +27

    I came here absolutely sure of the answer and now I'm leaving with a milliard questions, omg

  • @Tuning3434
    @Tuning3434 6 років тому +178

    Ah, another system where the UK decided to something illogical to not be the SAME as continental Europe.

    • @Tom81dd
      @Tom81dd 4 роки тому +5

      you have to keep in mind that that the metric system is a logical advancement of an illogical system ... so, the opposite of the 'murican-numbers-introduction'

    • @mephostopheles3752
      @mephostopheles3752 4 роки тому +9

      anonym Apparently the short system was invented and used long before the United States even existed.

    • @cigmorfil4101
      @cigmorfil4101 4 роки тому +2

      And I thought the Government *wanted* Britain to be a part of Europe...

    • @elizabethsusanlibra
      @elizabethsusanlibra 4 роки тому +1

      Well I live in a european country but we use the short system as well.

    • @marcelklappert2127
      @marcelklappert2127 4 роки тому +5

      @@Tom81dd Why is the metric system illogical? I'm curious.

  • @louconover767
    @louconover767 5 років тому +31

    This video is pretty old, so there are a lot of comments I didn't read. Has anyone mentioned Chinese? They group powers of ten by fours. (In order for the following to make sense, you have to know that there are thousands of homonyms in Chinese that are completely disambiguated by the characters used to write them. See below.) So:
    10000^0 = 10^0 = 1 - yi
    10^1 = 10 - shi
    10^2 = 100 - bai
    10^3 = 1000 - qian
    10000^1 = 10^4 = 10000 - wan (or yi wan, i.e. one ten-thousand)
    10^5 = 100000 - shi wan (ten ten-thousands)
    10^6 = 1000000 - bai wan (hundred ten-thousands)
    10^7 = 10000000 - qian wan (thousand ten-thousands)
    10000^2 = 10^8 = 100000000 - yi [different yi, see above] (one hundred-million)
    10^9 = 1000000000 - shi yi (ten hundred-millions)
    etc.
    There aren't any words past yi. They just start using standard notation.
    I've always followed a piece of advice I got from long ago. When discussing large numbers in English with a native Chinese speaker I always use the Chinese words

    • @豐竹高榮
      @豐竹高榮 5 років тому +4

      中文其实有四种进位方式--上数、中数、下数和万进位。上数:平方进位--亿(10^8)=万万((10^4)^2)、兆(10^16)=亿亿((10^8)^2)、京(10^32)=兆兆((10^16)^2)……中数:从“亿”开始,亿进位--亿(10^8)=万万(1 0000×1 0000)、兆(10^16)=亿亿(1 0000 0000×1 0000 0000)、京(10^24)=亿兆((10^8)×(10^16))……下数:10进位--亿(10000)=10万、兆(1000000)=10亿、京=10兆(10000000)……万进位,就是现在通用的--亿(1 0000 0000)=万万(1 0000×1 0000)、兆(10^12)=万亿(1 0000×1 0000 0000)、京(10^16)=万兆(1 0000×10^12)……

    • @badz2512
      @badz2512 4 роки тому

      In japanese it is quite similar to this as well.

    • @lawrencedoliveiro9104
      @lawrencedoliveiro9104 3 роки тому

      Then in India they have “lakh” and “crore”.

    • @gideonroos1188
      @gideonroos1188 2 роки тому

      The same happens in Japanese.

  • @SamHalls2015
    @SamHalls2015 Рік тому +2

    Even though I've learnt in school that a billion is a thousand million, I prefer the long scale system which was traditionally used in Britain prior to 1974. This is where a billion is a million million, a trillion is a million billion, a quadrillion is a million trillion, etc. I understand that the long scale system may be more cumbersome than the short scale system, but I agree that the long scale system makes more logical sense.
    The biggest key difference is that in the long system, a vigintillion is bigger than a googol, whereas it's smaller in the short system.
    The formula for the two systems can be shown here.
    Short scale system: 10^(3n+3)
    Long scale system: 10^6n
    Here is a list of key dictionary numbers in the long scale system:
    Million - 1e+6
    Billion - 1e+12
    Trillion - 1e+18
    Quadrillion - 1e+24
    Quintillion - 1e+30
    Sextillion - 1e+36
    Septillion - 1e+42
    Octillion - 1e+48
    Nonillion - 1e+54
    Decillion - 1e+60
    Googol (for comparison) - 1e+100
    Vigintillion - 1e+120
    Centillion - 1e+600
    Millinillion - 1e+6000
    Milli-millinillion - 1e+6000000
    Here's an extension to the system based on SI prefixes (this extension is derived from the Epstein system, devised by Louis Epstein):
    Megillion - 1e+6000000
    Gigillion - 1e+6000000000
    Terillion - 1e+(6e+12)
    Petillion - 1e+(6e+15)
    Exillion - 1e+(6e+18)
    Zettillion - 1e+(6e+21)
    Yottillion - 1e+(6e+24)
    Ronnillion - 1e+(6e+27)
    Quettillion - 1e+(6e+30)
    Still quite far from a googolplex, which has one followed by a googol (ten thousand sedecillion; ten duotrigintillion in the short scale) zeroes. A quettillion has a one followed by six quintillion zeroes (six nonillion in the short scale).

  • @wickedest-witch
    @wickedest-witch 9 років тому +199

    We use the long system in Iceland (with the milliard + billiard etc inbetween too)

    • @staqelsujet
      @staqelsujet 9 років тому +15

      +wickedest-witch In France too :D

    • @edtordo7512
      @edtordo7512 9 років тому +16

      +staqelsujet Here in Germany and here Russia in Russia we use the long one as well! (To both here because I am bilingual)

    • @andrewmirror4611
      @andrewmirror4611 9 років тому +2

      +Edward Überfluss (edward-ueberfluss) We in Russia are strange:
      10^3 - thouthand/тысяча [tisyacha]
      10^6 - million/миллион
      10^9 - milliard/миллиард, but if you say billion most of people will understand you as milliard
      10^12 - trillion
      10^15 - quadrillion
      etc.

    • @edtordo7512
      @edtordo7512 9 років тому

      +Сквиртл Андрей I know right? (Если ты не понял: я русский ;) )

    • @andrewmirror4611
      @andrewmirror4611 9 років тому

      Edward Überfluss Я решил, что ты Deutcsh, по НЕИЗВЕСТНОЙ причине

  • @alexanderjoseph5380
    @alexanderjoseph5380 3 роки тому +47

    I've never understood the long system, but now it makes so much more sense than the short system.

    • @PC_Simo
      @PC_Simo 2 роки тому +5

      As a Finn, I grew up with the long system; and I *_LOVE_* it. It’s *_THE_* System, for me; always has been; always will be. It just makes so much more sense. 🇫🇮😎👍🏻

  • @Matticitt
    @Matticitt 9 років тому +62

    The logic behind the short scale, and what is used to make it not idiotic, is actually 1000x1000 to the power of. So:
    1 Billion is 1000x1000^2
    1 Trillion is 1000x1000^3
    1 Quadrillion is 1000x1000^4 and so on...

    • @ruben307
      @ruben307 9 років тому

      +Mateusz Wojtkiewicz ...

    • @SirCutRy
      @SirCutRy 9 років тому

      +Mateusz Wojtkiewicz That is not the short system. According to your description, Billion in the short system would be 1000x1000 x 1000x1000 = 1000^4 which is Trillion in the short system.

    • @Matticitt
      @Matticitt 9 років тому +20

      1 Million = 1000x1000^1 = 1000x1000 = 1 000 000
      1 Billion = 1000x1000^2 = 1000x1 000 000 = 1 000 000 000
      1 Trillion = 1000x1000^3 = 1000x1 000 000 000 = 1 000 000 000 000
      ... so it does work. Don't know why you ended up with billion being 1000^4.

    • @SirCutRy
      @SirCutRy 9 років тому +3

      Mateusz Wojtkiewicz Okay, I messed up the order of operations. It is still more complicated.

    • @Matticitt
      @Matticitt 9 років тому +17

      SirCutRy it's ridiculous and the long scale is better in every way... just wanted to share the "logic" behind it since in the video they didn't seem to understand it.

  • @Michael_peanut
    @Michael_peanut 4 роки тому +2

    Eastern Europe here, Romania to be more precise.
    Had a course in uni on English from an economics pov... we actually had a few hours discussing this exact topic because it's so alien to us.

  • @vasyan123
    @vasyan123 8 років тому +150

    Make Billion Great Again

    • @whocareswho
      @whocareswho 7 років тому +10

      I have the best billion. I know billions. Noone has better billions than me.

    • @joryjones6808
      @joryjones6808 5 років тому +2

      whocareswho I got a small loan of a Million Million dollars.

  • @supalognon
    @supalognon 10 років тому +15

    While in every day French, "milliard" is a thousand million. But I personally don't think "billion" is often used.
    I often read "mille milliards" and I'm not talking about the Captain Haddock's swear "Mille milliards de mille sabords" of course.

  • @sionsmedia8249
    @sionsmedia8249 3 роки тому +8

    I live in Britan, and I've never heared of this before. But now that I have, I want to bring it back.

  • @AnoNymous-dh2sv
    @AnoNymous-dh2sv Рік тому +1

    I'm Greek and I didn't notice the myriad and 100 connection thanks. It also makes perfect sense linguistically at the etymology (as a connection of two words), both in ancient and modern greek variations of the language.

  • @Bernd322f
    @Bernd322f 10 років тому +53

    In Germany its:
    Millonen(million) = 1.000.000
    Milliarden(milliard) = 1.000.000.000
    Billionen(billion) = 1.000.000.000.000

  • @marcosg.6535
    @marcosg.6535 5 років тому +9

    There's also another little problem that comes with this language/number gap. There're lots of spanish/english translators that seem to forget that you actually also have to translate math, and the problem is bigger when the words millions, billions and trillions are basically written the same way in both languages so when, for example, they see the word "billonare" they translate it to what sounds correct in spanish, "billonario", an easy translation it seems. But then that word brakes the entire text because the number is massively huge in comparison to it's original form in english and the guy ends up having a net worth of around a $1000000000000 which is an insane number that no human can ever posses. The problem is also persistent in weight and distance measures. I remember being in elementary school and watching a drawing in an astronomy book with the weight of the earth and some other astronomical measures, everything in billions and trillions, i looked at my dad not being able to grasp the quantity of zeros those numbers could have, he looked at me an then told me this really tricky language thing, for a week I had thought the galaxy was a thousand times larger than it is.

    • @Anonymous-df8it
      @Anonymous-df8it 11 місяців тому +1

      Are there issues the other way around (though I guess it would be less severe for a milliard is unambiguous)?

  • @RightInFromDenmark
    @RightInFromDenmark 9 років тому +56

    Denmark uses the long system. Imagine the horror of reading and learning most things in english (short system) and then having to explain it in danish (long system) "there are7 billion people on earth, but not really cause someone couldn't pronouce 'milliard'"

    • @AtomicBoo
      @AtomicBoo 9 років тому +1

      +Lirk “Purps” Ravnsgaard yup, same thing happens to me in spanish, but the spanish speaking world doesn't really uses the world Milliard (Millardo) on a daily basis, we say "there are 7 thousand million people in the world/hay 7 mil millones de personas en el mundo". We use mil millones thats all :P

    • @thefunframe7912
      @thefunframe7912 8 років тому +1

      +supersuato123 exactly in spain millardo is not used, we allways say thousands of millions, and then billion for 10^12.
      Millardo is only for spanish speaking Americans.

    • @AtomicBoo
      @AtomicBoo 8 років тому

      thefun frame
      Yes!

  • @przemysawjarosz2925
    @przemysawjarosz2925 3 роки тому +1

    as someone from Poland, it is really confusing and just annoying
    I was speaking to my friends about things with super low chances of happening and I told them there was something with a chance of one in one trillion, then remembered that I learnt that in an english youtube video and was like: oh wait we've got a different trillion

  • @JMaldonado64
    @JMaldonado64 10 років тому +33

    We can't use the Long System because there would be no billionaires anymore, only millionaires and milliardaires :)

    • @miguelsilva9118
      @miguelsilva9118 5 років тому +2

      You joke, but I wouldn't be surprised if the first moron to use the short system was some rich douche that wanted to set himself apart from other rich douches and so wanted to be a billionaire instead of a millionaire like all those peasants.

  • @kratos6412
    @kratos6412 2 роки тому +3

    I’m australian and we use the short system. I agree that the long system makes more sense, and I actually like milliard and billiard etc. But it just sounds so wrong to me to call it that, I simply cannot wrap my head around it.

    • @stephanmaidl
      @stephanmaidl Місяць тому

      Cause you are not used to it, but longer version is the org., and dont know which idiot changed it

  • @BenJones-kd8hs
    @BenJones-kd8hs 11 років тому +14

    America is the centre of cultural discourse. 1000 million is a modern billion unfortunately

  • @rusellgonzalez3564
    @rusellgonzalez3564 6 місяців тому +1

    The long scale is made to make it bigger over time as new numbers are discovered, so it can be updated always. Ex: the grahham number
    grahham = (grahham's number)¹
    grahhard = 1000 times grahham
    bigrahham = (grahham's number)²
    bigrahhard = 1000 times bigrahham
    trigrahham = (grahham's number)³
    And so on (the scale can be bigger that this, but that is the point of the long system, this is just an example of how it works with a given number past the million)

  • @GameWorldRS
    @GameWorldRS 5 років тому +9

    I was born in Israel and moved to the US. when I was young...I remember always being confused and not understanding where the billiard disappeared...now it all makes sense!

  • @DrToonhattan
    @DrToonhattan 8 років тому +17

    Screw it. Let's abolish all the names and just use standard form for anything larger than 10,000.

  • @rodrigocontrerasmartinez3143
    @rodrigocontrerasmartinez3143 5 років тому +71

    In Chile we use the long system and it's a little confusing for me when I watch series in english, I still don't understand why someone would use the short one... so weird

    • @dennerdouglas8645
      @dennerdouglas8645 4 роки тому +4

      weird is have to say "thousand million" instead of simple ''billion''

    • @rodrigocontrerasmartinez3143
      @rodrigocontrerasmartinez3143 4 роки тому +2

      @@dennerdouglas8645 because it's really graphic. It's a thousand followed by 6 zeros

    • @ZoroarkLover98
      @ZoroarkLover98 4 роки тому +4

      @⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻ In Spanish the term is a Thousand Million

    • @feynman6625
      @feynman6625 4 роки тому +1

      It is shorter but incorrect.

    • @rodrigocontrerasmartinez3143
      @rodrigocontrerasmartinez3143 4 роки тому +5

      @@feynman6625 it's not wrong. It's a different language

  • @robertroy1878
    @robertroy1878 2 роки тому +1

    My father use to say there were two ways a billion was defined depending on the language. This clears it up. I remember when Canada underwent the metric conversion. I was in grade 2 in 1974..

  • @TechDubbed
    @TechDubbed 11 років тому +27

    here it goes million, milliard, billion, billiard, trillion, trilliard...

  • @Zolkora
    @Zolkora 4 роки тому +4

    I had no idea this was a thing. As a Brit living in the UK and only ever being taught the short form, I never even questioned it, but a lot of what they say makes sense.

    • @10thdoctor15
      @10thdoctor15 Рік тому

      Really? I was taught both, certainly by around 2011.

  • @graemezimmerman109
    @graemezimmerman109 5 років тому +7

    I’ve grown up in English speaking Canada and knew nothing of the long system until now and now I’m pissed we don’t use it. This makes so much more sense

  • @pugbread2873
    @pugbread2873 5 років тому +1

    In Finland we use the long system, however, the short system is not that illogical. It's just:
    1 = 1 000 ^ 1 - 1
    1 000 = 1 000 ^ 1 + 0
    1 000 000 = 1000 ^ 1 + 1
    and so on.
    The name billion makes sense as the 2 is added to the first power of 1 000.
    It's uncharitable to suggest that the names in the short system "lose their meaning".

  • @Stogoh
    @Stogoh 10 років тому +22

    I'm 16 years
    I live in Swizerland
    A Billion is 1'000'000'000'000

    • @Defeshh
      @Defeshh 10 років тому +13

      I still can't figure out why your age is relevant to your comment.

    • @Stogoh
      @Stogoh 10 років тому +2

      Because I'm NUMBERPHILE!!

    • @nazdreg42
      @nazdreg42 10 років тому +4

      Defeshh
      0:55

    • @Defeshh
      @Defeshh 10 років тому +2

      nazdreg grezdan Ohh gotcha, that went over my head. My bad.

    • @Stogoh
      @Stogoh 10 років тому

      :)

  • @itsthepiano1291
    @itsthepiano1291 8 років тому +313

    First time i heard about the short system.
    I have always used milliard and billiard.

    • @aaron9828
      @aaron9828 8 років тому +3

      So where are you from? I learned the short system for English at school.

    • @itsthepiano1291
      @itsthepiano1291 8 років тому +19

      Ich am från Sweden

    • @jnx4803
      @jnx4803 8 років тому +16

      Yea because it makes more sense. Geezz world would be much more simpler if we stop inventing confusing things because we are stubborn like US.

    • @lucass3485
      @lucass3485 8 років тому +3

      Albin Einstein
      *Ich komme aus Deutschland

    • @itsthepiano1291
      @itsthepiano1291 8 років тому +4

      Lucas Stefan Nien. Ich komme aus Schweden.

  • @SilverWave64
    @SilverWave64 10 років тому +14

    I'm glad I live in a country that used the long scale and the metric system :)

    • @SilverWave64
      @SilverWave64 10 років тому

      ***** It's because the people are used to the imperial system.

    • @MilesTraveler
      @MilesTraveler 10 років тому

      ***** me and all my friends use metric in Roleplay and writing. We use meters instead of yards as well, cm for heights and etc. ^0^ I prefer the short system but would gladly change to the long system for unity in langauge. But then... what about Asia?

    • @Lumphie
      @Lumphie 10 років тому +1

      MilesTraveler That's pretty funny :P Because in Dungeons and Dragons we actually use the imperial system. While we live in the Netherlands and normally use metric xD

    • @icosaedrial
      @icosaedrial 10 років тому +1

      Kees Wesselink I understand; miles and stones just feel more romantic than kilometres and kilograms in my mind, also better for immersion in fantasy settings.

    • @NemosChannel
      @NemosChannel 9 років тому

      ***** it seems simplest to just measure in whatever the rulesbook measures in.

  • @topilinkala1594
    @topilinkala1594 6 років тому +1

    In nineties I worked with the International Postal Union as a computer analyst and in one standard paper we had dictionary of the words used in the other standards. When that paper was put up to acceptance a huge commotation started by the entry "billion" which was defined as 10^9. The secretery of our group had to raise his voice to tell that it actually doesn't matter which one is in the papers but it has to be just one as standards have to be unambigious. And that calmed everyone down and the vote for 10^9 won.
    As a finn though I prefer and use the long system.

  • @HungryGuyStories
    @HungryGuyStories 9 років тому +18

    I know this varies by country, but to me this makes the most sense:
    1,000 = one Thousand
    1,000,000 = one Million
    1,000,000,000 = one Billion
    1,000,000,000,000 = one Trillion
    Every new "comma" gets a new name.

    • @blazednlovinit
      @blazednlovinit 9 років тому +12

      That's because the commas are put in correlating to powers of one thousand rather than powers of one million, the same would be true if you had a comma every 6 digits instead of every 3 :)

    • @akmedman8078
      @akmedman8078 9 років тому

      blazednlovinit In that case, saying things like one Thousand would be kind of weird, because there is no comma until 1 million. In the comma per 3 0's system, it's better because in every day life it's not like we need to use billions and stuff like that, and it would just make it harder to read.

    • @blazednlovinit
      @blazednlovinit 9 років тому +1

      Akmed Man Well it would be weird to you, but it wouldn't be "wrong". Plenty of different ways to handle mathematics other than our decimal, zero digit, place value system

    • @akmedman8078
      @akmedman8078 9 років тому

      blazednlovinit Yeah, I didn't mean it would be wrong, I was just saying it wouldn't be as efficient.

    • @blazednlovinit
      @blazednlovinit 9 років тому

      Akmed Man For what reason? It's still a base-ten/decimal system so the mathematics is exactly the same, you're literally just moving the comma and calling numbers different names.

  • @frozenunicorn2381
    @frozenunicorn2381 7 років тому +4

    I never new that a thing like a milliard exists outside of Germany... I always wondered about the difference between higher numbers back when I was younger, thanks for clarifying that :)

  • @ercb18
    @ercb18 3 роки тому +8

    as a canadian who grew up speaking english at home and french at school, i can confirm this messed me up so much

    • @ferocentaur8859
      @ferocentaur8859 3 роки тому

      Short scale and standard as as measurements are calculated LIES[of the establishment], plain and simple. And all just to tell you through false news media that they have billions and trillions of dollars in circulation as just another number in the currency, or that a galaxy has been discovered billions of light years away. It's a joke.

  • @ASSamiYT
    @ASSamiYT 2 роки тому +1

    I like how James explains the details. Then the other input is just " Grrr, this is rubbish!"

  • @aliedperez
    @aliedperez 8 років тому +7

    In the whole Spanish speaking we use the correct one. That is, a billion is a million million.

  • @LimitedWard
    @LimitedWard 10 років тому +5

    I think it would all make a lot more sense if we just called 1,000 a "million," 1,000,000 a "billion" and so on.

    • @usernamenotfound80
      @usernamenotfound80 10 років тому

      Since "mille" means "thousand" in Latin, we kind of _are_ calling 1.000 that, already. :)

    • @miguelsilva9118
      @miguelsilva9118 5 років тому

      @@usernamenotfound80 no, you're not. Million means "big thousand".

  • @dozenazer1811
    @dozenazer1811 5 років тому +41

    6:48 In Russian:
    Million = 10^6
    Milliard = 10^9
    Trillion = 10^12
    Quadrillion = 10^15
    Quintillion = 10^18
    etc

    • @snowtime5500
      @snowtime5500 5 років тому +7

      no billion between million and trillion?

    • @dozenazer1811
      @dozenazer1811 5 років тому +2

      @Martin Ducharme No

    • @bumpsy
      @bumpsy 5 років тому +17

      they just wanna confuse everybody lol

    • @matteoairaghi790
      @matteoairaghi790 5 років тому +2

      Same in italian, because people think millard means billion so the next one in their mind is trillion

    • @johannesh7610
      @johannesh7610 5 років тому +1

      That's strange

  • @weeb69
    @weeb69 5 років тому +2

    Japanese uses a different type of the long system, where instead of going by millions^n it goes by 10.000^n which is really confusing, because the number 10.000 isnt even ten thousands, but it's an entirely new number that has the value of 10.000 so it's more like the old Greek system(hope you understand what I mean)

    • @豐竹高榮
      @豐竹高榮 4 роки тому

      OK, East Asia and Greece has the myriad system.
      But East Asia number system also has another three scales: Up scale、middle scale、down scale.

  • @blafoon93
    @blafoon93 4 роки тому +5

    I am German and we use the long system, I then learned to count in French, a language that honestly needs to sort out the naming of their numbers!
    Then I was blessed in school learning to count in the English way, which actually added quite a lot of confusion because when you look up 'Milliarde', the German word for 10^9, you get two translations 'billion' and 'milliard'.... well and then I learned Korean which instead of using any of those systems has a system where the numbers receive new names for every multiplicative of 10.000.... Im planning on learning more languages and it would really make things easier if everyone could just sign a convention already that from now on in any place on earth things are counted in 10 to the power of...

  • @frankhaugen
    @frankhaugen 11 років тому +14

    In Norway, we use the long system, however, we are de fact bi-lingual, using English a lot, so we kinda get our values wrong when speaking to English speaking people

  • @nicholaslau3194
    @nicholaslau3194 8 років тому +7

    What they should have done is put prefixes to million, like the way computers do it. kilomillion, megamillion, gigamillion, teramillion. There is no dispute in k/m/g/t of their meaning, and keep the long system without reusing words, therefore there would be no confusion, for instance 1 megamillion = 1 billion

  • @HansKSG
    @HansKSG 4 роки тому +1

    My country uses the long count, but newspapers get numbers mentioned from the US wrong all the time, making things look smaller than they are.

  • @toffeeFairy
    @toffeeFairy 11 років тому +26

    I'm living in Switzerland so when I'm hearing reading english, i just think billion=Millarde, is that don't familiar, in England? I think the long system is simpler.
    I love your pronunciation of the World Milliard. (yes my english is bad, i know that.)

  • @DanielFinol
    @DanielFinol 10 років тому +4

    The reason the UK switched to the short system is that everybody else (outside the Anglo-Saxon world) uses the long system. They always have to do things differently (no metric system, driving on the left side), sabotaging standardization & internationalization.

  • @symbolxchannel
    @symbolxchannel 11 років тому +49

    In French, we use the milliard…

  • @litzzon1
    @litzzon1 4 роки тому +2

    I remember, when I started learning english, it was so confusing to me: eine Millionen - one million ; eine Milliarden - one billion ; eine Billionen - one Trillion

  • @kyoshiroma
    @kyoshiroma 8 років тому +63

    In spanish it's:
    Million = 1,000,000
    Milliard = 1,000,000,000 (millardo) thousand million
    Billion = 1,000,000,000,000 (billón)
    Billiard = 1,000,000,000,000,000 (billardo)

    • @betterdeadthanred5459
      @betterdeadthanred5459 8 років тому +15

      Just like most of Europe (I'm Polish lol)

    • @cunjoz
      @cunjoz 8 років тому +1

      In Croatian too :)

    • @anyaheyworld
      @anyaheyworld 8 років тому +1

      Kyo Shiroma same in Russian

    • @smeerkaasfabrikant6721
      @smeerkaasfabrikant6721 8 років тому +2

      Kyo Shiroma same in dutch

    • @alfgeircrichton
      @alfgeircrichton 8 років тому +1

      Anna, no. In russia we use short system, not long system (but word billion is replaced with word milliard).
      У нас не длинная шкала, а короткая, лишь с исключением, что слово биллион заменено словом миллиард.

  • @tiikoni8742
    @tiikoni8742 7 років тому +27

    You missed thousand in long system, is it then oneard? :-) Just kidding, we use long system in Finland too, "miljardi" being thousand millions.
    Though, wouldn't the most logical system be short system that is fixed one step down. Especially since "mill" in million is actually referring to thousand.
    1 = One = (1000)^0
    1 000 = Million = (1000)^1
    1 000 000 = Billion = (1000)^2
    1 000 000 000 = Trillion = (1000)^3
    ...

    • @thesuomi8550
      @thesuomi8550 7 років тому

      Tiikoni mutta sillon sen pitäis olla pelkkä mill eikä million

    • @tiikoni8742
      @tiikoni8742 7 років тому

      Hmm, ehkä. Mistä lie tuo "ion" tullut. Okay then: One (1), Mill (1 000), Bill (1 000 000), Trill (1 000 000 000)... :-)

    • @thesuomi8550
      @thesuomi8550 7 років тому

      Tiikoni xd
      Eiks tossa selitetty jotai et se on "iso tuhat" tai jotai sellasta

    • @Azrage
      @Azrage 6 років тому +1

      Thats what I think should be done. Cus we have the zeros (in english at least) in groups of three.

    • @ClipsNSnips
      @ClipsNSnips 4 роки тому

      Congratulations! :D You found the right answer ;) Now let's start a petition

  • @Peky44
    @Peky44 8 років тому +25

    Miljoona 1 000 000
    Miljardi 1 000 000 000
    Biljoona 1 000 000 000 000
    Triljoona 1 000 000 000 000 000 000
    Kvadriljoona 10^24
    Sentiljoona 10^600
    In finnish that is

  • @metronex360
    @metronex360 3 роки тому +1

    Long system in Poland, too. So we're taught the age of the Universe is 13,8 milliard and there are 7,6 milliard of people. I'm always confused with the short system and never got used to it.

  • @like31000
    @like31000 4 роки тому +30

    in italy:
    10^6: Milione
    10^9: Miliardo
    10^12: Bilione
    10^15: Biliardo (Number, it could also mean the game without context)
    10^18: Trilione
    10^21: Triliardo

    • @victorien4141
      @victorien4141 4 роки тому

      You made a mistake you should edit your comment

    • @like31000
      @like31000 4 роки тому +1

      @@victorien4141 What mistake?

    • @momoz4427
      @momoz4427 4 роки тому

      Edit your comment

    • @like31000
      @like31000 4 роки тому

      @@momoz4427 are you happy now?

    • @momoz4427
      @momoz4427 4 роки тому +1

      @@like31000 Yes, thank you very much! Have a nice day:)

  • @weeaboobaguette3943
    @weeaboobaguette3943 5 років тому +6

    Since i learnt about powers when i was a kid, millions milliards etc stopped being natural for me.
    I just think in powers now, and have to translate it into the words.

  • @J0EB0B555
    @J0EB0B555 4 роки тому +11

    The way I thought about the short system which makes perfect sense is the amount of extra sets of three zeros after a thousand. Aka 1000(1000)^x

  • @blackcat_064
    @blackcat_064 3 роки тому +2

    I thought this video was gonna be about how a billion is bigger than you think it is using crazy examples, but I ended up learning about this "long system" I've never even heard of. I guess it does make more sense in terms of the words though.

  • @Lord_Skeptic
    @Lord_Skeptic 5 років тому +14

    3:34 it is how many thousands are in front of the first thousand.
    Since million is one thousand in front of one thousand.

  • @aquawoelfly
    @aquawoelfly 11 років тому +4

    The numbers in the short system are more useful (especially internationally) but the names make mare sence in the long system.

  • @ffggddss
    @ffggddss 7 років тому +12

    I was brought up on the short system, and learned of the long system while still in school.
    And like James, I find the latter more logical, but will stick to the former.
    If, however, there were a move on to switch to the long system, I would support that.

  • @RWBHere
    @RWBHere 4 роки тому +2

    I must be old. We were taught the long system, in both Britain and Australia, until the 1970's, and I still use it, with older people. I prefer standard notation because of having a scientific background, and because it is unambiguous.
    I was also taught 'mil' for 1/1,000", which is still used by many engineers. So sheet metal which is ten mils thick is ten thousandths of an inch ('ten thou', too), or 0.01". It also occurs in SI units: Millimetres are thousands of a metre, for example.
    I also use myriad to mean 10,000 specifically, and not to mean 'many'. I was also taught to understand milliards, billiards, etc. It's also fun to confuse some people, by being correct, linguistically. Blame my being left-handed for that! 😁

    • @Anonymous-df8it
      @Anonymous-df8it 11 місяців тому +1

      Why don't they use 1/1024, seeing that the inch is typically divided into dyadic fractions?

  • @GravelLeft
    @GravelLeft 10 років тому +11

    In Norway we use the long system, the words Million and Milliard are really common, not so much Billion and Billiard.. When I was younger I was really confused why what we call Milliard was called Billion in english, tho we also have the word Billion, but it wasn't the same thing as in english. I also didn't really know the difference between Billion and Billiard, I would sometimes think they were the same number. This video suddenly makes sence of it all!

    • @krapfantasy
      @krapfantasy 10 років тому +3

      yeah, and I'm gonna enjoy saying "biljarder" again :D //svensk haha

  • @tasolyn
    @tasolyn 7 років тому +5

    When I'm speaking English I always think of a billion as 10^9.
    But in my local language of Dutch 10^9 is called 'Miljard' and we also have 'Biljoen' which is 10^12

  • @FroschGames
    @FroschGames 8 років тому +52

    German speaking:
    1.000.000 = Eine Million
    3.000.000 = Drei Millionen
    1.000.000.000 = Eine Milliarde
    3.000.000.000 = Drei Milliarden
    1.000.000.000.000 = Eine Billion
    3.000.000.000.000 = Drei Billionen
    and so on

    • @gideonroos1188
      @gideonroos1188 7 років тому +3

      FroschGames
      In Afrikaans:
      1 000 000 = een miljoen
      3 000 000 = drie miljoen
      1 000 000 000 = een miljard
      3 000 000 000 = drie miljard
      1 000 000 000 000 = een biljoen
      3 000 000 000 000 = drie biljoen
      and so on and so forth.

    • @iamcurious9541
      @iamcurious9541 7 років тому +2

      warum 3 und nicht 5

    • @modelparasite7026
      @modelparasite7026 6 років тому +1

      Shojiro Katsuragi Sama in Dutch

    • @jsjuhbdn
      @jsjuhbdn 6 років тому

      Dutch and afrikaans are so similar to me (someone who doesn't speek any of those)

  • @casplant
    @casplant 5 років тому +2

    Finally, this makes sense to me now! Thank you! In Dutch, these names also align with the '-air's' Miljonair - Miljardair - Biljonair - etc...