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Billion

Billion is a term used for a very large number, but its exact value has varied with time and country. In the short scale, which is now standard in most English-speaking contexts, a billion equals 1,000,000,000 (10^9). In the traditional long scale used in parts of Europe, a billion equals 1,000,000,000,000 (10^12). Because of this difference, the word can cause ambiguity without context.

The word derives from Old French billion, formed from bi- (“two”) and a suffix related to the

In modern technical and scientific writing, the SI prefixes are preferred for precision: giga- denotes 10^9,

Related terms to understand the scale include milliard (10^9 in the long scale) and trillion (10^12 in

word
for
large
quantity,
i.e.,
a
number
beyond
a
million.
The
long-scale
form
originally
implied
a
quantity
equal
to
a
million
millions,
while
the
short-scale
form
aligns
with
one
thousand
millions.
The
shift
in
usage
over
the
19th
and
20th
centuries
led
to
divergent
meanings
in
different
languages
and
regions.
and
tera-
denotes
10^12.
In
everyday
or
financial
contexts,
people
may
still
encounter
different
meanings
depending
on
the
country;
in
particular,
British
usage
historically
differed
from
American
usage
until
the
mid-20th
century
when
Britain
largely
adopted
the
short
scale.
the
short
scale;
10^18
in
the
long
scale).
Awareness
of
the
two
numbering
systems
helps
avoid
miscommunication
in
international
data,
economics,
and
media
reporting.