[go: up one dir, main page]
More Web Proxy on the site http://driver.im/Jump to content

quadrilliard

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

English

[edit]

Etymology

[edit]

From French quadrilliard, equivalent to quadri- +‎ -illiard.

Numeral

[edit]

quadrilliard (plural quadrilliards) (rare)

  1. A thousand million million million million: 1 followed by twenty-seven zeros, 1027.
    • 2002 June 19, bruce, “Re: Australians did it again! (?)”, in alt.fan.robert-jordan (Usenet), message-ID <cs9qea.as3.ln@ID-92747.user.dfncis.de>:
      Ugh. An Australian should use Australian numbers (the same as British), not American. 10^27 is 1,000 quadrillion (or a quadrilliard). An octillion would be 10^48.
    • 2003 December 3, arie, “Re: Why Women "Test" Men, and What Men can Do About It”, in alt.support.loneliness (Usenet), message-ID <bqkc2m$dg9$1@news.tudelft.nl>:
      Your estimation was quite accurate. In a body of 75 kg of water, there are roughly 2.5 x 10^28. That's 25 octillion (US) or 25 quadrilliard (EU).
    • 2007, Reinhard Wobst, “Life After DES: New Methods, New Attacks”, in Angelika Shafir, transl., Cryptology Unlocked, John Wiley & Sons, Ltd, →ISBN, section 3 (IDEA: A Special-Class Algoritmh), subsection 5 (Cryptanalyzing IDEA), page 239:
      There are weak keys in the sense that their use by foisting chosen plaintexts can be proved, which could be interesting for chip cards with a ‘burnt-in key’. First of all, however, these keys can be easily avoided—one only needs to XOR all subkeys with the hexadecimal number 0x0dae—and second, the probability that such a key can be caught is 2−96; that is about one out of 1029 randomly selected keys (this number even has a name: 100 quadrilliards).
    • 2014 May 16, Lela Buckingham, “Chapter 3: Systems of Measurement”, in Fundamental Laboratory Mathematics: Required Calculations for the Medical Laboratory Professional, Philadelphia: F. A. Davis Company, →ISBN, Box 3-3: Terms for Large Numbers, page 47:
      In the European system, 109 is a milliard, 1012 is a billion, 1015 is a billiard, 1018 is a trillion, 1021 is a trilliard, 1024 is a quadrillion, and 1027 is a quadrilliard. To avoid confusion in expressing these numbers, the SI prefixes are preferred.

Synonyms

[edit]

Translations

[edit]

See also

[edit]

French

[edit]
French numbers (edit)
[a], [b] ←  1021  ←  1024 1027 1030  →  1033  → 
    Cardinal: un quadrilliard
    Ordinal: quadrilliardième

Etymology

[edit]

From quadri- (four) +‎ -illiard.

Pronunciation

[edit]
  • IPA(key): /kwa.dʁi.ljaʁ/, /ka.dʁi.ljaʁ/
  • Audio:(file)

Numeral

[edit]

quadrilliard m (plural quadrilliards)

  1. octillion (1027)
    • 1921, Louis-Gustave Du Pasquier, Le développement de la notion de nombre [The Development of the Notion of Number] (Mémoires de l’Université de Neuchâtel [Memoirs of the University of Neuchâtel]; 3), page 125:
      fr. 53VI 695 236V 076 014IV 489 752III 446 593II 034 515I 466 398,33 / D’après nos propositions, ce nombre s’énoncerait ainsi : 53 sextillions 695 quintilliards 236 quintillions 76 quadrilliards 14 quadrillions 489 trilliards 752 trillions 446 billiards 593 billions 34 milliards 515 millions 466 mille 398 francs et 33 centimes.
      fr. 53VI 695 236V 076 014IV 489 752III 446 593II 034 515I 466 398,33 / According to our proposals, this number would be stated as follows: 53 undecillion 695 decillion 236 nonillion 76 octillion 14 septillion 489 sextillion 752 quintillion 446 quadrillion 593 trillion 34 billion 515 million 466 thousand 398 francs and 33 centimes.
    • 2017, Deepak Chopra, Menas Kafatos, translated by Olivier Vinet, Le pouvoir de l’univers est en vous : Partez à la découverte de votre origine cosmique [The Power of the Universe Is within You: Discover Your Cosmic Origin], Guy Trédaniel, →ISBN:
      Si l’on calcule le nombre total de protons et d’électrons constituant la matière atomique ordinaire, le résultat obtenu est de 1 suivi de 80 zéros, soit 100 trédécillions ! Cela équivaut à 25 quadrilliards [translating million sextillion] (25 x 1027) de planètes Terre.
      If we calculate the total number of protons and electrons that make up ordinary atomic matter, the result is 1 followed by 80 zeros, or 100 quinvigintillion! This is equivalent to 25 octillion (25 x 1027) planet Earths.
    • 2021, Thomas Andrieu, L’or et l’argent : Guide complet pour comprendre et investir [Gold and Silver: A Complete Guide to Understanding and Investing], JDH Éditions, →ISBN, page 175:
      À ce moment-là, un forint valait quatre cents quadrilliards pengő []
      At that time, one forint was worth four hundred octillion pengős []