English
Etymology
See -illion. An arbitrary coinage, appearing by 1916.[1]
Pronunciation
- enPR: zĭl'yən, IPA(key): /ˈzɪljən/
- Rhymes: -ɪljən
Noun
zillion (plural zillions)
- (slang, hyperbolic) An unspecified large number (of).
- Synonyms: gazillion; see also Thesaurus:zillion
2008 December 6, “Brain tests show child wealth gap”, in BBC News:"We are certainly not blaming lower socioeconomic families for not talking to their kids - there are probably a zillion reasons why that happens."
Derived terms
Translations
unspecified large number
- Armenian: ծիծիլիոն (cicilion)
- Dutch: ton (nl) f, ziljoen (nl) n
- Esperanto: umiliono
- Finnish: tsiljoona
- French: trouzillion (fr) m
- Galician: millenta
- Hebrew: מָלַאנְתַּלָּפִים (he) pl (malantalafim)
- Hungarian: csillió
- Icelandic: skrilljón f
- Korean: 골백 (golbaek)
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: ørten, fantasillion m, zillion m
- Persian: شونصد (šunsad) (slang)
- Polish: zylion m
- Portuguese: zilhão (pt), zilião
- Russian: охреллион m (okhrellion)
- Spanish: (Chile, Guatemala, Mexico, Spain) chorrocientos, (Chile, Guatemala, Mexico) chorromil, (Dominican Republic, Nicaragua, Peru, Puerto Rico) cuchucientos, (Latin America) cuchumil, (Colombia) (please verify) enemil, (River Plate) quichicientas, (Chile, Cuba, Mexico, Uruguay) sepetecientos, (Panama, Venezuela) sopotocientos, (Spain) tropecientos, chiquicientas (River Plate), chorroscientos (Mesoamerica)
- Swedish: ziljon (sv) c, fantasiljon c
- Turkish: zilyon, zibilyon
|
References
Further reading