I'm not sure but i do not believe m is an abbreviation for thousand. But i do know it stands for meter which will probably not help if you're trying to figure out number abbreviation's. But I'm tyring to inform you it stands for meter.
Thousand
To convert square feet to m² multiply by .09291000 square feet is 92.9 m²
It would depend on how big the candy dispenser is. I know that m and m's are small though.
maybe 20-30
Any number, however big (or small) can be rounded to the nearest ten thousand. 0, rounded to the nearest ten thousand is 0 5001 rounded to the nearest ten thousand is 10,000 123,123,123,123,123,123 rounded to the nearest ten thousand is 123,123,123,123,120,000 and so on.
Yes, although technically it is a Roman Numeral meaning 1000, not an abbreviation.
a small m
mil. MM is an abbreviation that may represent one million. M typically represents one thousand, so "MM" literally conveys "a thousand thousand". mil.
M = a thousand dollars MM = a million dollars (a thousand thousands)
K is an abbreviation for Kilo-(thousand). The abbreviation for Thousand is THOU.
Are you talking about measurements? Kilo Or Roman Numerals? M Specify your question.
"k" for kilo is a common abbreviation for thousands "M" is the Roman numeral for one thousand (MM for two, MMM for three, M then V with a line over it for four, V with a line over it for five, etc..) "k" for kilo is a common abbreviation for thousands "M" is the Roman numeral for one thousand (MM for two, MMM for three, M then V with a line over it for four, V with a line over it for five, etc..)
Million. M means thousand. They're Roman numbers.
Yes in printing it is becoming more and more common to use M as an abbreviation for one thousand. However, recently I was getting a quote from Malaysia for a print job and they mistook it for Million. That would have been a huge mistake!
km is an abbreviation for kilometre (or kilometer). The prefix "kilo" indicates a thousand. So there are a thousand grams in a kilogram. Take it from there.
No it isn't, but THOUS is an abbreviation of the word Thousand.
Yes, but only generally within the finance industry. MM <=> Thousand, thousand <=> Million (from M in Roman numerals = 1,000)