The Latin word for 1000 is mīlle.
(IPA: /ˈmiːl.le/)
1000 = Mille
It is short for kilo - Latin for 1000.
Mille.
The prefix for 0.001 or 1/1000 is milli-, from the latin for 1000.
1000
As of the 21st Century, more than 1000 Languages use variations of the Latin alphabet, including:AfrikaansBariCatalánDanishDutchEnglishFrenchGermanHungarianIndonesianItalianJavaneseKapingamarangiMalaysianNorwegianPortugueseOjibweQuechuaRomanianSpanishSwedishTagalogUme SámiVietnameseWalloonXhosaYorubaZulu
I believe in latin "kilo" means 1000, k is short for kilo.
No, a thousand. From the Latin mille = 1000
Divide by 1000. So 1 / 1000 = 0.001 kilograms.
There are 1000 milliliters (ml) in one liter. 1000 ml = 1 l mille is Latin for a thousand
Kilo is Latin for thousand. Therefore a kilogram is 1000 grams. 90/1000= 0.09 kilograms
1000. Kilo is the Latin word for 'thousand'. So kilo + bit would be 1000 bits.