1) a hundred and fifty-four / one hundred and fifty-four. 2) eight hundred and seventy-six. 3) seven hundred and seventy-seven. 4) two thousand, four hundred and sixty-five. 5) five thousand, nine hundred and twenty-one. 6) six thousand and one. 7) seven thousand and fifty-eight. 8) eight thousand, three hundred and one.
Use 1,000 and 1,000,000 always with 'a' or 'one'. 1,000 - a thousand / one thousand 201,000 - two hundred and one thousand Use commas as a separator. 57,458,302 The Number 1,000,000,000. In English this number is a billion. This is very tricky for nations where 'a billion' has 12 zeros. 1,000,000,000,000 in English, however, is a trillion.
1000 English Grammar Test Practice Questions: 1-20 Present Simple Visit for more information, lessons vocabulary and other grammati. Grammar Practice Test 1. Grammar Practice Test 2. Grammar Practice Test 3. More Grammar Practice Tests and Recommended Study Resources. Many online resources are available for people interested in improving their grammar. Many of these resources can be found absolutely free online, such as: Free Grammar Practice Tests and Sample Questions.
Should you use the word or symbol? Is 'percent' singular or plural?
By
April 4, 2008
Episode #101
Listen
How to Write Percents
Update Required To play the media you will need to either update your browser to a recent version or update your Flash plugin.
Subscribe
Hide player
Today's topic is part II of the series on numbers: percentages and decimal points.
Percent Versus Percentage
First let's get our terminology right. In some cases percent and percentage can be interchangeable (1), but the easiest way to choose the right word for the right situation is to use percent with a number and percentage without a number. For example,
[Percent with a number] Forty percent of the chocolate was missing
Buy Now
As an Amazon Associate and a Bookshop.org Affiliate, QDT earns from qualifying purchases.
Also, in American English, when you write out the word percent, it's one word. It's more common to see the two-word version--per cent--in British English, but sources tell me the one-word version is becoming more common in Britain too (2, 3, 4). The evolution of the word is kind of interesting. It started out as the Latin phrase per centum, which means 'by the hundred (1),' and over the years got shortened to the two-word English version, and is now quite established as a single English word (2).
Pages
1000 Contoh Soal Bahasa Inggris Grammar: Preposition-Tenses
www.sekolahbahasainggri.com-Ingin berlatih soal-soal grammar online lewat internet? Belajar aja di SBI. Pelajari soal-soal dibawah ini: