The prefix of a billion - in the sense of a thousand millions - is "Gega", abbreviated "G".
SI units of measurements: meter (length), kilogram (mass), second (time), ampere (electric current), kelvin (temperature), mole (amount of substance), candela (luminous intensity). Common SI prefixes: kilo- (k, 10^3), mega- (M, 10^6), giga- (G, 10^9), milli- (m, 10^-3), micro- (μ, 10^-6), nano- (n, 10^-9), pico- (p, 10^-12).
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Some common prefixes for "grace" include "dis-" (as in disgrace) and "inter-" (as in intergrace).
In terms of linguistics, there are typically around 50 common prefixes used in English. These prefixes are added to the beginning of words to change their meaning.
Common prefixes for "excuse" include "un-" (unexcused), "mis-" (misexcuse), and "re-" (re-excuse).
The SI prefixes are from Greek, including deka, hecta, kilo, and mega (10, 100, 1000, 1 million)
In math, there are 9 zeros in giga. Giga is part of the SI prefixes. Giga symbol is G. If giga were money it would means you have one billion dollars.
Pico is the prefix in most English speaking countries. Atto is the prefix in most European countries. A trillion or a trillionth in the US has a different numerical value than the same trillion or trillionth in a European country.
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The SI unit of mass is the kilogram. However the prefixes are based on the gram.
A miligram. Grams are an SI unit, so they go with all the standard SI prefixes.
No. The SI unit of length is the meter; the same unit with prefixes (such as millimeter and kilometer) is also used.
10 Newtons. See related question "What are the SI prefixes?"
The English billion, a redundant measure, is 1,000,000,000,000 (ie. a million million). Its use dimished following the advent of computers and the internet, as the American billion, 1,000,000,000 came into common usage.At present, in England, the word billion means 1,000,000,000 (ie. a thousand million) = 109.The move is often thought to be related to the use of the standard scientific (SI) units, which use prefixes that increase by products of one thousand, giving a new numerical measure for each prefix.
SI units of measurements: meter (length), kilogram (mass), second (time), ampere (electric current), kelvin (temperature), mole (amount of substance), candela (luminous intensity). Common SI prefixes: kilo- (k, 10^3), mega- (M, 10^6), giga- (G, 10^9), milli- (m, 10^-3), micro- (μ, 10^-6), nano- (n, 10^-9), pico- (p, 10^-12).
In the SI, the usual SI prefixes would be used for smaller units - prefixes such as milli, micro, etc.
There is no special prefix for that factor. There are SI prefixes for powers of 10 (10, 100, 1000, 0.1, 0.01, 0.001), and especially for powers of 1000 (1000, a million, a billion, 1/1000, etc.)