- Is it improper English to read the number 1100 as eleven hundred?
For numbers between 1000 and 9999 is it proper English for the word "hundred" to be used? For example is it necessarily wrong to say "eleven hundred" when referring to 1100?
- Indefinite article: “a” vs “an” preceding numbers with multiple . . .
Figure 5 is an SEM photomicrograph of a typical contact area after an 1100°C test (Smothers, 2009) By juggling with components already in production, BMC engine designers have mated the 1275S cylinder block [from the Mini Cooper] with an 1100 transmission, which is unchanged except for a much higher-geared final drive (Taylor, 2015)
- single word requests - Precise names for parts of a day - English . . .
The time after 12 00 and 15 00 - afternoon; 12 00 exactly is NOON - meal after 1100 until 1500 is lunch) Any thing, i e , tea coffee any beaverage except hard drinks with snacks - tea (before 5 00 pm)
- Comma separator for numbers with 4 or 5 digits?
Oddly, they say that “a 1,100-percent increase” and “an 1100-percent increase” are both acceptable They don’t explain; I guess the rationale is that “1,100” would be pronounced “one thousand one hundred” and “1100” would be pronounced “eleven hundred”
- Is it proper grammar to refer to four digit number in hundreds?
Sometimes you will hear people refer to four digit numbers in terms of hundreds For example, sometimes people will say fifteen hundred when talking about the number 1500 Is this proper? What ar
- Using hundreds to express thousands: why, where, when?
The question title refers to expressing thousands using multiples of hundreds, like saying "twelve hundred" instead of "one thousand two hundred" This is somehow new to me I may have heard it, li
- meaning - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
A simple solution is not synonymous with an elegant solution Consider the problem of adding up the first hundred positive whole numbers: a simple but inelegant solution is to directly and laboriously perform the 99 additions, whereas an elegant, though arguably not simple, solution is to avoid brute-force calculation by sorting the numbers as 1,100 2,99 3,98 4,97 50,51 then observing that
- etymology - What was the first use of the saying, You miss 100% of the . . .
This is often credited to Wayne Gretzky (see for example Forbes), but I have some serious doubts that this is the original So, 2 questions here: Was Wayne Gretzky really the first to say this?
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