{| class="infobox"
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!colspan=2|
List of numbers -
Integers
100000 1000000 10000000
|-
|
Cardinal
|One million
|-
|
Ordinal
|One millionth
|-
|
Factorization
|2
6 · 5
6
|-
|
Roman numeral
|
|-
|Unicode representation
of
Roman numeral
|
|-
|
Binary
|11110100001001000000
|-
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Hexadecimal
|F4240
|}
One 'million' (1,000,000), or one thousand
thousand, is the
natural number following 999,999 and preceding 1,000,001.
In
scientific notation, it is written as 10
6.
Physical quantities can also be expressed using the
SI prefix mega, when dealing with
SI units. For example, 1
megawatt equals 1,000,000
watts.
The million is sometimes used in the
English language as a
metaphor for a very large number, as in "Never in a million years" and "You're one in a million", or a
hyperbole, as in "I've walked a million miles". ''
Il Milione'' is the title of
Marco Polo's narration of his travel to
China.
The name is supposed to come from Polo's nickname after his tales of riches and multitudes.
The word "million" is common to the
short scale and
long scale numbering systems (and also to the ''proposed''
Rowlett numbering system), unlike the larger numbers, which have different names in the two systems.
The name is derived from Italian, where ''mille'' was 1,000, and 1,000,000 became millione, "a large thousand".
The word ''million''
In standard
English, it is pronounced with an
l-sound followed by a
y-glide. However, as other languages use a fully
palatalized 'l' in this word (such as Italian spells by 'gl'), some English-speakers have picked up this pronunciation, which does not occur elsewhere in the English language but in words of this model.
This word is the most common of words ending in -lion. In
American English this can cause spelling confusion due to its double 'll' while words like 'vermilion', 'pavilion', etc. are spelled with a single 'l'. This is not helped by the fact that it does not have a distinct pronunciation.
See also
★
Orders of magnitude (numbers) to help compare
dimensionless numbers between 1,000,000 and 10,000,000 (10
6 and 10
7).
★
Names of large numbers
Selected 7-digit numbers (1,000,000 - 9,999,999)
★ '1,000,003' - Smallest 7 digit prime number
★ '1,046,527' -
Carol number
★ '1,048,576' = 2
20 (
power of two), 2,116-
gonal number, an 8,740-gonal number and a 174,764-gonal number, the number of
bytes in a
mebibyte, the number of
kibibytes in a
gibibyte, and so on. Also the most rows that
Microsoft Excel (Microsoft Office 2007) can accept in a single worksheet.
★ '1,048,976' -
Leyland number
★ '1,050,623' -
Kynea number
★ '1,058,576' - Leyland number
★ '1,084,051' -
Keith number
★ '1,089,270' -
harmonic divisor number
★ '1,111,111' -
repunit
★ '1,136,689' -
Pell number,
Markov number
★ '1,234,567' - Smarandche consecutive number (base 10 digits are in numerical order)
★ '1,278,818' - Markov number
★ '1,342,269' -
Fibonacci number
★ '1,346,269' - Markov number
★ '1,421,280' -
harmonic divisor number
★ '1,441,440' -
colossally abundant number
★ '1,441,889' - Markov number
★ '1,539,720' - harmonic divisor number
★ '1,563,372' -
Wedderburn-Etherington number
★ '1,594,323' = 3
13
★ '1,596,520' - Leyland number
★ '1,647,086' - Leyland number
★ '1,679,616' = 6
8
★ '1,686,049' - Markov number
★ '1,741,725' - equal to the sum of the seventh power of its digits
★ '1,771,561' = 11
6 = 1331
2, also, Commander Spock's estimate for the
tribble population in the '' episode "
The Trouble With Tribbles"
★ '1,941,760' - Leyland number
★ '1,953,125' = 5
9
★ '2,012,174' - Leyland number
★ '2,012,674' - Markov number
★ '2,097,152' = 2
21, power of two
★ '2,097,593' - Leyland number
★ '2,124,679' -
Wolstenholme prime
★ '2,178,309' - Fibonacci number
★ '2,222,222' -
repdigit
★ '2,356,779' -
Motzkin number
★ '2,423,525' - Markov number
★ '2,674,440' -
Catalan number
★ '2,744,210' - Pell number
★ '2,796,203' -
Wagstaff prime
★ '2,922,509' - Markov number
★ '3,263,442' - product of the first five terms of
Sylvester's sequence
★ '3,263,443' - sixth term of Sylvester's sequence
★ '3,276,509' - Markov number
★ '3,301,819' -
alternating factorial
★ '3,333,333' - repdigit
★ '3,524,578' - Fibonacci number, Markov number
★ '3,626,149' -
Wedderburn-Etherington number
★ '3,628,800' = 10!
★ '4,037,913' - sum of the first ten
factorials
★ '4,190,207' - Carol number
★ '4,194,304' = 2
22, power of two
★ '4,194,788' - Leyland number
★ '4,198,399' - Kynea number
★ '4,208,945' - Leyland number
★ '4,210,818' - equal to the sum of the seventh powers of its digits
★ '4,213,597' -
Bell number
★ '4,400,489' - Markov number
★ '4,444,444' - repdigit
★ '4,782,969' = 3
14
★ '4,785,713' - Leyland number
★ '4,826,809' = 13
6
★ '5,134,240' - the largest number that cannot be expressed as the sum of distinct fourth powers
★ '5,555,555' - repdigit
★ '5,702,887' - Fibonacci number
★ '5,764,801' = 7
8
★ '6,536,382' - Motzkin number
★ '6,625,109' - Pell number, Markov number
★ '6,666,666' - repdigit
★ '7,453,378' - Markov number
★ '7,777,777' - repdigit
★ '7,861,953' - Leyland number
★ '7,913,837' - Keith number
★ '8,000,000' - Used to represent infinity in Japanese mythology
★ '8,388,608' = 2
23, power of two
★ '8,389,137' - Leyland number
★ '8,399,329' - Markov number
★ '8,436,379' - Wedderburn-Etherington number
★ '8,946,176' -
self-descriptive number in base 8
★ '9,227,465' - Fibonacci number, Markov number
★ '9,369,319' -
Newman-Shanks-Williams prime
★ '9,647,009' - Markov number
★ '9,694,845' - Catalan number
★ '9,765,625' = 5
10
★ '9,800,817' - equal to the sum of the seventh powers of its digits
★ '9,865,625' - Leyland number
★ '9,926,315' - equal to the sum of the seventh powers of its digits
★ '9,999,991' - Largest 7 digit prime number
★ '9,999,999' - repdigit