See also: Trillion

English

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Pronunciation

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Etymology 1

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From French trillion, from tri- (three) +‎ -illion.

Numeral

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trillion (plural trillions)

  1. (US, modern British, Australia, short scale) A million million: 1 followed by twelve zeros, 1012.
  2. (dated British, Australia, long scale) A million million million: 1 followed by eighteen zeros, 1018.
Synonyms
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Descendants
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  • Welsh: triliwn
Translations
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The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.
See also
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Etymology 2

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Coined by Harvey Pollack, because of the way the numbers read across a basketball box score

Noun

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trillion (plural trillions)

  1. (basketball, slang) A statistic formed by a player playing some number of minutes, but recording no stats.

French

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French numbers (edit)
[a], [b], [c] ←  1012 [a], [b], [c] ←  1015 1018 1021  → [a], [b], [c] 1024  → 
    Cardinal (traditional spelling): un trillion, un milliard de milliards
    Cardinal (post-1990 spelling): un-trillion, un-milliard de milliards
    Ordinal: trillionième, milliardième de milliardième

Etymology

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From tri- (three) +‎ -illion, from million; i.e. a million million million.

Coined by Jehan Adam in 1475 as trimillion. Rendered as tryllion by Nicolas Chuquet in 1484, in his article “Triparty en la science des nombres”.

Pronunciation

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Numeral

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trillion m (plural trillions)

  1. quintillion (1018)
  2. (dated) trillion (1012)
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Descendants

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References

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Further reading

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Middle French

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Noun

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trillion m (plural trillions)

  1. trillion, 1018
    • 1520, Étienne de La Roche, L'arismethique novellement composee, page 6:
      ung trillion vault mille milliers de billions
      a trillion is equivalent to a thousand thousands of billions

Tatar

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Numeral

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trillion (Cyrillic spelling триллион)

  1. trillion (1012)

Declension

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