A lakh is equal to 100,000, one tenth of million, or 105. [1]It is used in the Indian naming system. 100 lakh is one crore. Larger numbers are sometimes combinations of both, a lakh crore for example equal to one trillion. 1000 lakh is one myllion in the myriad system.
Aarex Tiaokhiao calls this number qoonol, 5-noogol[2], or goonaoltrult, and it's equal to a(10,100,0)x[3] in Aarex's Array Notation.[3]
Username5243 calls this number niloogolduplex or gooqnol, and it's equal to 10[1]5 in Username5243's Array Notation.[4]
In the German language, 100,000 is sometimes called "Zehntelmillion".
Some currencies, such as the Indonesian rupiah and the Vietnamese đồng, have banknotes with this number in the denomination.
It was also the prize for correctly answering the first question in the Italian game show Chi vuol essere miliardario? in Italian lire.
Furthermore, it was also the prize for correctly answering the first five questions in the Japanese game show Quiz $ Millionaire in Japanese yen.
In politics
In Germany, municipalities with at least 100,000 inhabitants are called Großstadt.
Approximations
Notation | Lower bound | Upper bound |
---|---|---|
Scientific notation | \(1\times10^5\) | |
Arrow notation | \(10\uparrow5\) | |
Steinhaus-Moser Notation | 6[3] | 7[3] |
Copy notation | 9[5] | 1[6] |
Taro's multivariable Ackermann function | A(3,13) | A(3,14) |
Pound-Star Notation | #*(32)*3 | #*(2)*13 |
BEAF | {10,5} | |
Hyper-E notation | E5 | |
Bashicu matrix system | (0)[316] | (0)[317] |
Hyperfactorial array notation | 8! | 4!1 |
Fast-growing hierarchy | \(f_2(12)\) | \(f_2(13)\) |
Hardy hierarchy | \(H_{\omega^2}(12)\) | \(H_{\omega^2}(13)\) |
Slow-growing hierarchy | \(g_{\omega^5}(10)\) |
Sources
See also
Indian counting system: Lakh · Crore · Tallakshana · Uppala · Dvajagravati · Paduma · Mahakathana · Asankhyeya · Dvajagranisamani · Vahanaprajnapti · Inga · Kuruta · Sarvanikshepa · Agrasara · Uttaraparamanurajahpravesa · Avatamsaka Sutra · Nirabhilapya nirabhilapya parivarta · Jaghanya Parīta Asaṃkhyāta
Chinese, Japanese and Korean counting system: Wan · Yi · Zhao · Jing · Gai · Zi · Rang · Gou · Jian · Zheng · Zai · Ji · Gougasha · Asougi · Nayuta · Fukashigi · Muryoutaisuu
See also: Template:Googology in Japan
Megoogol · Meg-Googol · Meg-Doogol · Meg-Kiloogol · Meg-Kil-Googol · Meg-Dukiloogol · Meg-Trukiloogol · Dumegoogol · Dumeg-Googol · Dumeg-Kiloogol · Dumeg-Dukiloogol · Trumegoogol · Trumeg-Kiloogol · Tetrumegoogol · Pentumegoogol · Gigoogol · Gig-Googol · Gig-Kiloogol · Gig-Megoogol · Dugigoogol · Trugigoogol · Teroogol · Duteroogol · Truteroogol · Petoogol · Ectoogol · Zettoogol · Yottoogol · Xennoogol · Wekoogol
Note: The readers should be careful that numbers defined by Username5243's Array Notation are ill-defined as explained in Username5243's Array Notation#Issues. So, when an article refers to a number defined by the notation, it actually refers to an intended value, not an actual value itself (for example, a[c]b = \(a \uparrow^c b\) in arrow notation). In addition, even if the notation is ill-defined, a class category should be based on an intended value when listed, not an actual value itself, as it is not hard to fix all the issues from the original definition, hence it should not be removed.