- Lakh - Wikipedia
The modern word lakh derives from Sanskrit: लक्ष, romanized: lakṣa, originally denoting "mark, target, stake in gambling", but also used as the numeral for "100,000" in Gupta-era Classical Sanskrit (Yājñavalkya Smṛti, Harivaṃśa)
- LAKH Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
Priyanka Salve, CNBC, 16 Sep 2025 According to a report by the Rediffusion Consumer Lab, India's middle class, defined as households earning between ₹5 lakh and ₹30 lakh annually (roughly $6,000 to $36,000), made up 31 percent of the population in 2025
- lakh - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
lakh (plural lakhs or lakh) (South Asia, Myanmar) One hundred thousand (10⁵): 100,000, that is, with Indian digit grouping, 1,00,000 alternative form holonym quotations
- How Many Zeros in a Lakh?
How many zeros are in a lakh? Learn the meaning of a lakh in the Indian numbering system, how it compares to western units like million, and how it's used in daily life, currency, and population data
- LAKH | definition in the Cambridge English Dictionary
Numbers generally access code Arabic numeral C, c constant contextual variable continuous variable control variable figure logarithm logarithmically M, m million N, n numeral ordinal ordinate outcome variable prime number Roman numeral unit See more results » (Definition of lakh from the Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary Thesaurus
- Lakh - definition of lakh by The Free Dictionary
1 One hundred thousand: created three lakh jobs; worth one lakh fifty thousand rupees 2 A large, indefinite number: lakhs of birds in the sky
- Lakh Definition (Illustrated Mathematics Dictionary)
Illustrated definition of Lakh: One Hundred Thousand Commonly used in South Asia Written as 1,00,000 in the Indian Numbering System Example:
- Lakh
A lakh (also spelled lac; abbreviated as L) is a unit in the South Asian numbering system equal to one hundred thousand (100,000 or 10⁵) It is commonly used to denote large quantities, especially in financial and statistical contexts, such as salaries, populations, or currency amounts in rupees The term originates from the Hindi lākh, which traces back to the Sanskrit lakṣa, originally
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