Eleventy-Zillion: Difference between revisions

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{{trope}}
{{trope}}
{{quote|'''Fry''': ''One jillion dollars!''<br />
{{quote|'''Fry''': ''One jillion dollars!''
''[Audience Gasps]''<br />
''[Audience Gasps]''
'''Auctioneer''': ''That's not a real number, sir.''<br />
'''Auctioneer''': ''That's not a real number, sir.''
''[Audience Gasps Harder]''|''[[Futurama (Animation)|Futurama]]''}}
''[Audience Gasps Harder]''
|''[[Futurama]]''}}


When your notation isn't enough, it's better to make up new numbers on the spot.
When your notation isn't enough, it's better to make up new numbers on the spot.
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# Just making up numbers when their correct meaning may be guessed: for example, "eleventy" must be 110.
# Just making up numbers when their correct meaning may be guessed: for example, "eleventy" must be 110.


Of course, there are plenty of ''real'' large numbers ending in -illion, usually formed with boring Latin prefixes - [[Wikipedia (Wiki)|Wikipedia]], as always, [[wikipedia:Names of large numbers|has a list.]]
Of course, there are plenty of ''real'' large numbers ending in -illion, usually formed with boring Latin prefixes - [[Wikipedia]], as always, [[wikipedia:Names of large numbers|has a list.]]


[[Ridiculous Future Inflation]] can be a cause of this. Usually a [[Comedy Trope]]. Justified when a character really uses another notation. For money, compare [[Zillion-Dollar Bill]] and contrast [[Undisclosed Funds]].
[[Ridiculous Future Inflation]] can be a cause of this. Usually a [[Comedy Trope]]. Justified when a character really uses another notation. For money, compare [[Zillion-Dollar Bill]] and contrast [[Undisclosed Funds]].
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{{examples}}
{{examples}}
== Advertising ==
* "Did you know women prefer Old Spice for their men one bajillion times more than ladies' scented body washes? Did you know that I'm riding this horse backwards? Hyah!"
* There's an ING commercial where one man is carrying around a sign that reads 1.2 million dollars which is the amount that he knows he needs to have in order to live comfortably in retirement. His next door neighbor has a sign that says "A Gazillion" to illustrate that he doesn't know what he requires for retirement and thus needs the company's services.


== Comics ==
== Comic Books ==
* ''[[Disney Ducks Comic Universe]]'':
* ''[[Disney Ducks Comic Universe]]'':
** In [[Carl Barks]]'s "Some Heir Over The Rainbow," Scrooge's fortune is given as nine fantasticatillion, four billion-jillion, centrifugalillion dollars [[Ludicrous Precision|and sixteen cents]].
** In [[Carl Barks]]'s "Some Heir Over The Rainbow," Scrooge's fortune is given as nine fantasticatillion, four billion-jillion, centrifugalillion dollars [[Ludicrous Precision|and sixteen cents]].
** In the climax of "The Crazy Quiz Show", [[Donald Duck]]'s final question (and his [[Unexpectedly Obscure Answer]]) was the following:
** In the climax of "The Crazy Quiz Show", [[Donald Duck]]'s final question (and his [[Unexpectedly Obscure Answer]]) was the following:
{{quote| '''Q:''' How many drops of water pass over Niagara Falls in a week?<br />
{{quote|'''Q:''' How many drops of water pass over Niagara Falls in a week?
'''A:''' Nine trillion multipadillion, six hundred and eighty-six squadrificillion, fifty octodecimadillion, eight hundred and sixty-three centrifipillion, nine hundred and forty overplusillion, six hundred and five duplicatillion, thirty-three impossibadillion, seven hundred and ninety-one compounded ultrafatillion, three hundred and forty super trillion, fifty-nine duper dillion, twenty-nine billion, seven hundred and fifty million, four hundred and six thousand, five hundred and thirty-three drops. }}
'''A:''' Nine trillion multipadillion, six hundred and eighty-six squadrificillion, fifty octodecimadillion, eight hundred and sixty-three centrifipillion, nine hundred and forty overplusillion, six hundred and five duplicatillion, thirty-three impossibadillion, seven hundred and ninety-one compounded ultrafatillion, three hundred and forty super trillion, fifty-nine duper dillion, twenty-nine billion, seven hundred and fifty million, four hundred and six thousand, five hundred and thirty-three drops. }}
*** An easier answer would be 3, if you consider a "drop" is also a smaller fall within a waterfall.
*** An easier answer would be 3, if you consider a "drop" is also a smaller fall within a waterfall.


== Commercials ==
* "Did you know women prefer Old Spice for their men one bajillion times more than ladies' scented body washes? Did you know that I'm riding this horse backwards? Hyah!"
* There's an ING commercial where one man is carrying around a sign that reads 1.2 million dollars which is the amount that he knows he needs to have in order to live comfortably in retirement. His next door neighbor has a sign that says "A Gazillion" to illustrate that he doesn't know what he requires for retirement and thus needs the company's services.



== Fan Works ==
== Fan Works ==
* In ''[[My Immortal]]'', Enoby shoots Snap and Loopin a gazillion times with her gun. [[Guns Are Worthless|This only manages to break the video camera.]]
* In ''[[My Immortal]]'', Enoby shoots Snap and Loopin a gazillion times with her gun. [[Guns Are Worthless|This only manages to break the video camera.]]
* Parodied and subverted in ''[[Yu Yu Hakusho Abridged]]''.
* Parodied and subverted in ''[[Yu Yu Hakusho Abridged]]''.
{{quote| '''Sakyo''': $20 billion on the intruders.<br />
{{quote|'''Sakyo''': $20 billion on the intruders.
'''Tarukune''': Sakyo, quit bustin' my balls. Stop makin' up numbers.<br />
'''Tarukune''': Sakyo, quit bustin' my balls. Stop makin' up numbers.
'''Giles''': A billion ''is'' a real number, sir.<br />
'''Giles''': A billion ''is'' a real number, sir.
'''Tarukune''': I've just been informed that a billion is a real number. }}
'''Tarukune''': I've just been informed that a billion is a real number. }}
* According to the first episode of ''[[Ouran the Vaguely Abridged Series]]'', Haruhi Fujioka needs "eight million jillion quadrillion malalalalilion shoo-ba-da-da-do-bop-bop-ian" in order to pay off a broken vase. Also note that value doesn't have a currency attached to it.



== Film ==
== Film ==
* ''[[Duplex]]''
* ''[[Duplex]]''
{{quote| '''Nancy Kendricks:''' Well it's going to be worth a bazillion times that.}}
{{quote|'''Nancy Kendricks:''' Well it's going to be worth a bazillion times that.}}
* ''[[Who Framed Roger Rabbit]]''
* ''[[Who Framed Roger Rabbit?]]''
{{quote| '''Eddie Valiant:''' We were investigating a robbery at the First National Bank of Toontown. [snip] Anyway, this guy got away with a zillion simoleons.}}
{{quote|'''Eddie Valiant:''' We were investigating a robbery at the First National Bank of Toontown. [snip] Anyway, this guy got away with a zillion simoleons.}}
** Might actually be justified (and not just by [[Rule of Funny]]). "Zillion" might in fact ''be'' a number in Toon, and one wonders if there's an exchange rate for "simoleons".
** Might actually be justified (and not just by [[Rule of Funny]]). "Zillion" might in fact ''be'' a number in Toon, and one wonders if there's an exchange rate for "simoleons".
*** Or you could always spend them in [[Sim City]].
*** Or you could always spend them in [[SimCity]].
* ''[[Undercover Brother]]''
* ''[[Undercover Brother]]''
{{quote| '''The Chief:''' Didn't you cause about a ba-zillion dollars worth of damage?}}
{{quote|'''The Chief:''' Didn't you cause about a ba-zillion dollars worth of damage?}}
* ''[[Hercules (Disney)|Hercules]]''
* ''[[Hercules (1997 film)|Hercules]]''
{{quote| '''Hades:''' Uh, yeah, Poseidon, about a zillion times...}}
{{quote|'''Hades:''' Uh, yeah, Poseidon, about a zillion times...}}
* ''[[Starship Troopers (Film)|Starship Troopers]]'' (also used in [[Starship Troopers (Literature)|the book]]).
* ''[[Starship Troopers (film)|Starship Troopers]]'' (also used in [[Starship Troopers (novel)|the book]]).
{{quote| '''Trooper:''' Bugs, Mr. Rico! Zillions of 'em!}}
{{quote|'''Trooper:''' Bugs, Mr. Rico! Zillions of 'em!}}
* To modern ears, ''[[Back to The Future]]'''s famous "1.21 jiggawatts" sounds like this, but it's really just an outdated pronunciation of "gigawatts".
* To modern ears, ''[[Back to The Future]]'''s famous "1.21 jiggawatts" sounds like this, but it's really just an outdated pronunciation of "gigawatts".
** Either that or the power generated by [[The Power of Rock|dancing 1.21 jigs]].
** Either that or the power generated by [[The Power of Rock|dancing 1.21 jigs]].
* ''[[Austin Powers]]'': Dr. Evil holds the world hostage for "1 billion, gagillion, fafillion, shabolubalu million illion yillion...yen". The UN deems it a reasonable price.
* ''[[Austin Powers]]'': Dr. Evil holds the world hostage for "1 billion, gagillion, fafillion, shabolubalu million illion yillion...yen". The UN deems it a reasonable price.
** This was a reference to the two previous films:
** This was a reference to the two previous films:
*** In ''International Man of Mystery'', Dr. Evil decides to hold the world hostage for "one ''million'' dollars!" A large amount of money in 1967... not so much in 1997. [[Number Two]] convinces him to hold the world ransom for the more reasonable amount of "one hundred... ''billion''... dollars." When he calls the UN to give them his demands, he accidentally gives them the one million dollar price and they laugh in his face - and are then shocked when he gives the real amount.
*** In ''International Man of Mystery'', Dr. Evil decides to hold the world hostage for "one ''million'' dollars!" A large amount of money in 1967... not so much in 1997. [[Number Two]] convinces him to hold the world ransom for the more reasonable amount of "one hundred... ''billion''... dollars." When he calls the UN to give them his demands, he accidentally gives them the one million dollar price and they laugh in his face - and are then shocked when he gives the real amount.
*** In ''The Spy Who Shagged Me'', Dr. Evil contacts the White House and demands the sum of "one hundred billion dollars!" He's met with ridicule because it's 1969: there isn't that much money ''in the entire world''. He then gives the one million dollar figure and they predictably panic.
*** In ''The Spy Who Shagged Me'', Dr. Evil contacts the White House and demands the sum of "one hundred billion dollars!" He's met with ridicule because it's 1969: there isn't that much money ''in the entire world''. He then gives the one million dollar figure and they predictably panic.
** He also states in the third film "Why go for trillions when we can go for billions", which [[Only Sane Man|Scott]] proceeds to angrily correct. Seems Dr. Evil just really sucks at both math and economics.
** He also states in the third film "Why go for trillions when we can go for billions", which [[Only Sane Man|Scott]] proceeds to angrily correct. Seems Dr. Evil just really sucks at both math and economics.
* ''[[Pee Wees Big Adventure]]'': "I wouldn't sell my bike for all the money in the world - not for a hundred million billion ''trillion'' dollars!" The end result is a one with 29 zeroes after it.
* ''[[Pee-wee's Big Adventure]]'': "I wouldn't sell my bike for all the money in the world - not for a hundred million billion ''trillion'' dollars!" The end result is a one with 29 zeroes after it.
* In the beginning of ''[[Toy Story]]'', the wanted poster of Mr. Potato Head shows the "$50 bzillion" reward. Of course, the drawing was done by a six year old boy.
* In the beginning of ''[[Toy Story (franchise)|Toy Story]]'', the wanted poster of Mr. Potato Head shows the "$50 bzillion" reward. Of course, the drawing was done by a six year old boy.



== Jokes ==
== Jokes ==
* ''Donald Rumsfeld briefed the President this morning. He told Bush that three Brazilian soldiers were killed in Iraq. To everyone's amazement, all of the colour ran from Bush's face, then he collapsed onto his desk, head in hands, visibly shaken, almost whimpering. Finally, he composed himself and asked Rumsfeld, "Just exactly how many is a brazillion?"''
* ''Donald Rumsfeld briefed the President this morning. He told Bush that three Brazilian soldiers were killed in Iraq. To everyone's amazement, all of the colour ran from Bush's face, then he collapsed onto his desk, head in hands, visibly shaken, almost whimpering. Finally, he composed himself and asked Rumsfeld, "Just exactly how many is a brazillion?"''



== Literature ==
== Literature ==
* From ''[[The Lord of the Rings (Literature)|The Lord of the Rings]]'':
* From ''[[The Lord of the Rings]]'':
{{quote| "Today is my 111th birthday: I am eleventy-one today!"}}
{{quote|"Today is my 111th birthday: I am eleventy-one today!"}}
** In this instance, it's a case of [[Ye Olde Butcherede Englishe]]--emphasis on Old English (the term was derived from ''hund endleofantig'').
** In this instance, it's a case of [[Ye Olde Butcherede Englishe]]emphasis on Old English (the term was derived from ''hund endleofantig'').
** Also the implications that since hobbits live longer than humans, uneventfully going over a hundred, they would need handier terms for such ages.
** Also the implications that since hobbits live longer than humans, uneventfully going over a hundred, they would need handier terms for such ages.
*** Bilbo's life was artificially lengthened by the ring, so he had lived much longer than a normal hobbit.
*** Bilbo's life was artificially lengthened by the ring, so he had lived much longer than a normal hobbit.
* In ''[[Life the Universe And Everything]]'', the Krikkit Wars apparently resulted in two grillion casualties.
* In ''[[Life the Universe And Everything]]'', the Krikkit Wars apparently resulted in two grillion casualties.
* ''[[Discworld (Literature)/Witches Abroad|Witches Abroad]]'':
* ''[[Witches Abroad]]'':
{{quote| "Bet you a million trillion zillion dollars you can't turn that bush into a pumpkin," said the child.<br />
{{quote|"Bet you a million trillion zillion dollars you can't turn that bush into a pumpkin," said the child.
...<br />
...
"Nothing. Just thinking. And you owe me a million trillion zillion squillion dollars." }}
"Nothing. Just thinking. And you owe me a million trillion zillion squillion dollars." }}
* [[Dave Barry]] once proposed that Congress should use the "Whomptillion", defined as "an amount of money so huge that every time a Congressman says the word, your taxes go up 5%".
* [[Dave Barry]] once proposed that Congress should use the "Whomptillion", defined as "an amount of money so huge that every time a Congressman says the word, your taxes go up 5%".
* In the last [[Ramona Quimby]] book, Ramona turns ten, but refers to herself as "zeroteen" because she thinks the way the first three double-digit numbers get left out of the "teens" is arbitrary and unfair.
* In the last [[Ramona Quimby]] book, Ramona turns ten, but refers to herself as "zeroteen" because she thinks the way the first three double-digit numbers get left out of the "teens" is arbitrary and unfair.
** In ''Beezus and Ramona'', when she's five, she weighs herself and comes up with "fifty-eleven pounds."
** In ''Beezus and Ramona'', when she's five, she weighs herself and comes up with "fifty-eleven pounds."


== Live-Action TV ==

== Live Action TV ==
* ''[[The Cosby Show]]''
* ''[[The Cosby Show]]''
** "It's All in the Game"
** "It's All in the Game"
{{quote| '''Cliff Huxtable:''' Do you know just how much it's going to cost to fix the washing machine? A bazillion dollars.}}
{{quote|'''Cliff Huxtable:''' Do you know just how much it's going to cost to fix the washing machine? A bazillion dollars.}}
** "Denise Kendall: Navy Wife"
** "Denise Kendall: Navy Wife"
{{quote| '''Cliff Huxtable:''' There is a zillion skillion babies in Heaven.}}
{{quote|'''Cliff Huxtable:''' There is a zillion skillion babies in Heaven.}}
* ''[[Saturday Night Live]]'' ''Celebrity [[Jeopardy (TV)|Jeopardy]]'' [http://snltranscripts.jt.org/99/99qjeopardy.phtml Tobey Maguire was playing Keanu Reeves]:
* ''[[Saturday Night Live]]'' ''Celebrity [[Jeopardy!]]'' [https://web.archive.org/web/20131029071956/http://snltranscripts.jt.org/99/99qjeopardy.phtml Tobey Maguire was playing Keanu Reeves]:
{{quote| '''Alex Trebek:''' [to Keanu] Let's see what you wagered: Eleventy billion dollars. That's not even a real number.<br />
{{quote|'''Alex Trebek:''' [to Keanu] Let's see what you wagered: Eleventy billion dollars. That's not even a real number.
'''Keanu Reeves:''' Yet. }}
'''Keanu Reeves:''' Yet. }}
** In another episode, Alex threw out the final category and told the contestants to write down any number at all in order to win. Jimmy Fallon's French Stewart went with "threeve" and then wagered "$Texas."
** In another episode, Alex threw out the final category and told the contestants to write down any number at all in order to win. Jimmy Fallon's French Stewart went with "threeve" and then wagered "$Texas."
* Parodied on ''[[That Mitchell and Webb Look]]'', in a [[Calvin Ball|Numberwang]] sketch where an "Imaginary Numbers" round is played. Somehow, while "Twentington" and "Frilve hundred and Neeb" are accepted, "Shinty-six" (depicted as fifty-six with a reversed five) is rejected as a real number, as in the popular phrase, "I only have shinty-six days left to live."
* Parodied on ''[[That Mitchell and Webb Look]]'', in a [[Calvin Ball|Numberwang]] sketch where an "Imaginary Numbers" round is played. Somehow, while "Twentington" and "Frilve hundred and Neeb" are accepted, "Shinty-six" (depicted as fifty-six with a reversed five) is rejected as a real number, as in the popular phrase, "I only have shinty-six days left to live."
* Timmy Mallet's children's breakfast show from [[The Eighties]], ''Wacaday'', popularised "squillion". This recently re-emerged when [[Nick Clegg]] used it in one of the British prime ministerial debates.
* Timmy Mallet's children's breakfast show from [[The Eighties]], ''Wacaday'', popularised "squillion". This recently re-emerged when [[Nick Clegg]] used it in one of the British prime ministerial debates.
* In the episode "Culture for the Masses" in ''[[The Goodies (TV)|The Goodies]]'', Tim buys a painting at an auction for "one million billion quintillion zillion pounds and two and a half new pence", which it goes without saying that he does not have. They leave thirteen pence as a deposit. By [[Contrived Coincidence]], the National Gallery have all their paintings insured for exactly one million billion quintillion zillion pounds. [[Hilarity Ensues]].
* In the episode "Culture for the Masses" in ''[[The Goodies]]'', Tim buys a painting at an auction for "one million billion quintillion zillion pounds and two and a half new pence", which it goes without saying that he does not have. They leave thirteen pence as a deposit. By [[Contrived Coincidence]], the National Gallery have all their paintings insured for exactly one million billion quintillion zillion pounds. [[Hilarity Ensues]].
* The TV Series of ''[[The Hitchhikers Guide to The Galaxy]]'' extends a line of dialogue from the book and puts in a new number:
* The TV Series of ''[[The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy]]'' extends a line of dialogue from the book and puts in a new number:
{{quote| '''Ford Prefect:''' I think this ship is brand-new, Arthur.<br />
{{quote|'''Ford Prefect:''' I think this ship is brand-new, Arthur.
'''Arthur Dent:''' Why, have you got some exotic device for measuring the age of metal?<br />
'''Arthur Dent:''' Why, have you got some exotic device for measuring the age of metal?
'''Ford Prefect:''' No. I just found this sales brochure on the floor. It says, "The Universe can be yours for a mere five quilliard Altairian dollars."<br />
'''Ford Prefect:''' No. I just found this sales brochure on the floor. It says, "The Universe can be yours for a mere five quilliard Altairian dollars."
'''Arthur Dent:''' Cheap?<br />
'''Arthur Dent:''' Cheap?
'''Ford Prefect:''' A quilliard is a whole page full of [[British English|noughts]] [''[[American English|zeros]]''] with a one at the beginning. }}
'''Ford Prefect:''' A quilliard is a whole page full of [[British English|noughts]] [''[[American English|zeros]]''] with a one at the beginning. }}
* ''[[Mr. Show]]'' featured a sketch set in the 1890s which revolved around a marching band competition judged by the "Eleventy-Twelfth President of the United States".
* ''[[Mr. Show]]'' featured a sketch set in the 1890s which revolved around a marching band competition judged by the "Eleventy-Twelfth President of the United States".
* There was a series of sketches on ''[[Mad TV]]'' parodying ''[[School House Rock]]'' and one of the songs parodied was [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IHYtYE8_bzU&feature=related "Three is a Magic Number"]. The lyrics went like:
* There was a series of sketches on ''[[Mad TV]]'' parodying ''[[Schoolhouse Rock]]'' and one of the songs parodied was [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IHYtYE8_bzU&feature=related "Three is a Magic Number"]. The lyrics went like:
{{quote| ''3, 6, 9''<br />
{{quote|''3, 6, 9''
''12, 47, 90''<br />
''12, 47, 90''
''Something, next, 100''<br />
''Something, next, 100''
''3 times 10 is -2''<br />
''3 times 10 is -2''
''3 times 5 is elevendy''<br />
''3 times 5 is elevendy''
''3 times 2 is I dunno'' }}
''3 times 2 is I dunno'' }}



== Music ==
== Music ==
* Jay-Z's "Allure":
* Jay-Z's "Allure":
{{quote| "The game is a light bulb with eleventy-million volts"}}
{{quote|"The game is a light bulb with eleventy-million volts"}}
* [[Usher (Music)|Usher]]'s "Burn" has this:
* [[Usher]]'s "Burn" has this:
{{quote| "It's been fifty-eleven days, umpteen hours,<br />
{{quote|''It's been fifty-eleven days, umpteen hours,
I'm gonna be burnin' 'til you return!" }}
''I'm gonna be burnin' 'til you return!}}



== Newspaper Comics ==
== Newspaper Comics ==
* ''[[Calvin and Hobbes (Comic Strip)|Calvin and Hobbes]]'': On a math test, Calvin asks Suzie for an answer, and she responds "three hundred billion gazillion."
* ''[[Calvin and Hobbes]]'': On a math test, Calvin asks Suzie for an answer, and she responds "three hundred billion gazillion."
** This is then lampshaded, as Calvin proceeds to snark her for giving such a "helpful" answer. Susie then follows up by saying that it's a 3, followed by 85 zeroes, and Calvin writes it down.
** This is then lampshaded, as Calvin proceeds to snark her for giving such a "helpful" answer. Susie then follows up by saying that it's a 3, followed by 85 zeroes, and Calvin writes it down.
** Spaceman Spiff also tends to use these kinds of "-illion" numbers.
** Spaceman Spiff also tends to use these kinds of "-illion" numbers.
** When Calvin asks Hobbes for help with his math homework, Hobbes notes that it requires calculus and imaginary numbers, "You know, eleventeen, thirty-twelve, and all those." ([[wikipedia:Imaginary number|Imaginary numbers]], by the way, are a real mathematical concept, but not the way Hobbes puts it.)
** When Calvin asks Hobbes for help with his math homework, Hobbes notes that it requires calculus and imaginary numbers, "You know, eleventeen, thirty-twelve, and all those." ([[wikipedia:Imaginary number|Imaginary numbers]], by the way, are a real mathematical concept, but not the way Hobbes puts it.)
* ''Dilbert'' has "frooglepoopillion".
* ''Dilbert'' has "frooglepoopillion".



== Tropes ==
== Tropes ==
* [[Zillion-Dollar Bill]] - [[Self Explanatory]].
* [[Zillion-Dollar Bill]] - [[Self Explanatory]].



== [[Video Games]] ==
== [[Video Games]] ==
* The [[Billy vs. SNAKEMAN|Eleventy Billionth HoKage]] insists that "eleventy" means "[[Logic Bomb|eleven more than everything]]"
* ''[[Billy vs. SNAKEMAN]]'': The Eleventy Billionth HoKage insists that "eleventy" means "[[Logic Bomb|eleven more than everything]]"
* One selling point of ''[[Borderlands (Video Game)|Borderlands]]'' was its "87 bazillion" guns (actually creations courtesy of a parts generator), which [[Fan Dumb]] has tried to explain as both a finite ''or'' an infinite number of guns, depending on who you ask.
* One selling point of ''[[Borderlands]]'' was its "87 bazillion" guns (actually creations courtesy of a parts generator), which [[Fan Dumb]] has tried to explain as both a finite ''or'' an infinite number of guns, depending on who you ask.
** The actual number of weapon combinations is quite high, but doesn't even come close to the "billion" moniker.
** The actual number of weapon combinations is quite high, but doesn't even come close to the "billion" moniker.
* In ''[[Earthbound|Mother 2]]'' (the Japanese Version), Porky's dad claims Ness' family owes him an unrealistic value, something equivalent to "hundred million jillion dollars". In the US version, it was changed to a realistic value of hundred thousand dollars or more.
* In ''[[EarthBound|Mother 2]]'' (the Japanese Version), Porky's dad claims Ness' family owes him an unrealistic value, something equivalent to "hundred million jillion dollars". In the US version, it was changed to a realistic value of hundred thousand dollars or more.
** Also, [[Years Too Early|it is a gazillion years too early]] to oppose [[Eldritch Abomination|Giygas]]! Well, according to {{spoiler|Porky}}, anyways.
** Also, [[Years Too Early|it is a gazillion years too early]] to oppose [[Eldritch Abomination|Giygas]]! Well, according to {{spoiler|Porky}}, anyways.
* In the starting zone for Goblins in ''[[World of Warcraft]]'', [[Starter Villain|Trade Prince Gallywick]] demands the player give him "a bazillion macaroons" in exchange for safe passage from [[Doomed Hometown|Kezan]]. It's not stated how much this is, but even though the player is one of the richest goblins in town, he/she has to defeat mobs of bandits, [[Karmic Thief|steal from Gallick's estate]], and torch his own office for the insurance in order to meet the price.



== [[Web Comics]] ==
== [[Web Comics]] ==
* In ''[[Sinfest]]'', [http://www.sinfest.net/archive_page.php?comicID=3251 Uncle Sam will sell Lil' Evil the warhead for 900 billion jillion dollars.]
* In ''[[Sinfest]]'', [https://web.archive.org/web/20140209161611/http://sinfest.net/archive_page.php?comicID=3251 Uncle Sam will sell Lil' Evil the warhead for 900 billion jillion dollars.]
* In ''[[Homestuck (Webcomic)|Homestuck]]'', the [[Infinity+1 Sword|Warhammer of Zillyhoo]] costs "ONE ZILLION" grist to [[Item Crafting|alchemize]]. Although it may also mean it costs ONE unit of ZILLION-type grist ([[Unobtainium|which never appeared in the comic so far]]).
* In ''[[Homestuck]]'', the [[Infinity+1 Sword|Warhammer of Zillyhoo]] costs "ONE ZILLION" grist to [[Item Crafting|alchemize]]. Although it may also mean it costs ONE unit of ZILLION-type grist ([[Unobtainium|which never appeared in the comic so far]]).



== Web Original ==
== Web Original ==
* [http://www.google.com/cse?cx=partner-pub-6610802604051523:2szln92pqym&safe=off&ie=ISO-8859-1&q=zillion&sa=Search All these pages] and more.
* [http://www.google.com/cse?cx=partner-pub-6610802604051523:2szln92pqym&safe=off&ie=ISO-8859-1&q=zillion&sa=Search All these pages] and more.
* The [[Urban Dictionary]] has [http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=Eleventy%20Billion Eleventy Billion], from the ''[[Saturday Night Live]]'' example.
* The [[Urban Dictionary]] has [http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=Eleventy%20Billion Eleventy Billion], from the ''[[Saturday Night Live]]'' example.
* [[Weebl and Bob|Insanity Prawn Boy]] likes to use the number "fifty-twelve". Incidentally, he lives in apartment 512.
* [[Weebl and Bob|Insanity Prawn Boy]] likes to use the number "fifty-twelve". Incidentally, he lives in apartment 512.
* [[Played With]] in a January 15, 2006 headline on [[Fark|Fark.com]]:
* According to the first episode of ''[[Ouran the Vaguely Abridged Series]]'', Haruhi Fujioka needs "eight million jillion quadrillion malalalalilion shoo-ba-da-da-do-bop-bop-ian" in order to pay off a broken vase. Also note that value doesn't have a currency attached to it.
{{quote|''Brazilian astronauts to visit Space Station. [[George W. Bush|Bush]] asks how they'll fit that many up there.''}}



== Western Animation ==
== Western Animation ==
* [[Duck Tales|Scrooge McDuck]] earns these amounts daily. His total fortune is given [http://disneycomics.free.fr/Ducks/Rosa/show.php?s=date&loc=D91308 here] as Five multiplujillion, nine impossibidillion, seven fantasticatrillion dollars and seventeen cents.
* [[DuckTales (1987)|Scrooge McDuck]] earns these amounts daily. His total fortune is given [https://web.archive.org/web/20120414195635/http://disneycomics.free.fr/Ducks/Rosa/show.php?s=date&loc=D91308 here] as Five multiplujillion, nine impossibidillion, seven fantasticatrillion dollars and seventeen cents.
** In the Dutch versions, his inane amounts always end at "...and sixteen cents" instead. List your country too if it deviates!
** In the Dutch versions, his inane amounts always end at "...and sixteen cents" instead. List your country too if it deviates!
* ''[[Fairly Oddparents]]'': [[Jerkass Genie|Norm the Genie]] tries to get Timmy to order a million billion jillion dollars. Timmy says he knows there's no such number as a jillion, [[Wrong Genre Savvy|and wishes for the billion]]. [[Hilarity Ensues]] - {{spoiler|he never said they would be "real".}}
* ''[[The Fairly Oddparents]]'': [[Jerkass Genie|Norm the Genie]] tries to get Timmy to order a million billion jillion dollars. Timmy says he knows there's no such number as a jillion, [[Wrong Genre Savvy|and wishes for the billion]]. [[Hilarity Ensues]] - {{spoiler|he never said they would be "real".}}
* ''[[Frosty the Snowman]]'' (1969)
* ''[[Frosty the Snowman]]'' (1969)
{{quote| '''[[Santa Claus]]:''' Now you go home and write "I am very sorry for what I did to Frosty" 100 zillion times.}}
{{quote|'''[[Santa Claus]]:''' Now you go home and write "I am very sorry for what I did to Frosty" 100 zillion times.}}
** And it's implied at the end he succeeded.
** And it's implied at the end he succeeded.
* ''[[Animaniacs (Animation)|Animaniacs]]'' episode "Flipper Parody/Temporary Insanity/Operation: Lollipop/What Are We?": a check for 80 zillion dollars.
* ''[[Animaniacs]]'' episode "Flipper Parody/Temporary Insanity/Operation: Lollipop/What Are We?": a check for 80 zillion dollars.
* ''[[Batman Beyond]]'' episode "The Winning Edge"
* ''[[Batman Beyond]]'' episode "The Winning Edge"
{{quote| '''Batman:''' Come on, he must be a zillion years old.}}
{{quote|'''Batman:''' Come on, he must be a zillion years old.}}
* ''[[Family Guy]]'':
* ''[[Family Guy]]'':
{{quote| '''Senator 1:''' I say we fine the El Dorado Tobacco Company infinty billion dollars!<br />
{{quote|'''Senator 1:''' I say we fine the El Dorado Tobacco Company infinty billion dollars!
'''Senator 2:''' That's the spirit! But I think a real number might be more effective. }}
'''Senator 2:''' That's the spirit! But I think a real number might be more effective. }}
* ''[[Codename: Kids Next Door]]'':
* ''[[Codename Kids Next Door]]'': in an operation at an ice cream factory, Numbah Three finally finds a thermostat and promptly cranks it to the "Like eleventy bajillion degrees!" setting.
** In "Operation: I.S.C.R.E.A.M. Numbah Three finally finds a thermostat and promptly cranks it to the "Like eleventy bajillion degrees!" setting.
** There's a villain from ''Codename: Kids Next Door'' who always says he wants a buh-million dollars (denoted as $BUH.000.000).
** Chester always says he wants a buh-million dollars (denoted as $BUH.000.000), and he gets a check for that much from Mr. Boss in "Operation: U.T.O.P.I.A"; although, this is only because the heroes have trapped him in his own [[Lotus Eater Machine]].
** In fact, the number "eleventy billon" is thrown around quite frequently, presumably meaning 110 * 10<sup>9</sup>, or 110,000,000,000. Even ''Father'' says it in "Operation: Z.E.R.O."
** In fact, the number "eleventy billon" is thrown around quite frequently, presumably meaning 110 * 10<sup>9</sup>, or 110,000,000,000. Even ''Father'' says it in "Operation: Z.E.R.O."
* On ''[[The Penguins of Madagascar]]'', when Kowalski is asked about a number that's less than nothing, he comes up with "neg-finity".
* On ''[[The Penguins of Madagascar]]'', when Kowalski is asked about a number that's less than nothing, he comes up with "neg-finity".
* In the ''[[Spongebob SquarePants]]'' episode "Truth or Square", the Krusty Krab celebrates its eleventy-seventh anniversary.
* In the ''[[SpongeBob SquarePants]]'' episode "Truth or Square", the Krusty Krab celebrates its eleventy-seventh anniversary.
* In one episode of ''[[Doug]]'', the titular character is imagining [[Curb Stomp Battle|an utterly one-sided baseball game.]] When he asks Skeeter for the score, his bud replies, "A bajillion to nothing."
* In one episode of ''[[Doug]]'', the titular character is imagining [[Curb Stomp Battle|an utterly one-sided baseball game.]] When he asks Skeeter for the score, his bud replies, "A bajillion to nothing."
* In one episode of ''[[Futurama]]'', when Fry was bidding against [[Corrupt Corporate Executive|Mom]] for the last can of anchovies on Earth:
* In one episode of ''[[Futurama]]'', when Fry was bidding against [[Corrupt Corporate Executive|Mom]] for the last can of anchovies on Earth:
{{quote| '''Fry:''' ''(pointing dramatically)'' [[This Is Sparta|One. Jillion. Dollars.]] <br />
{{quote|'''Fry:''' ''(pointing dramatically)'' [[Punctuated! For! Emphasis!|One. Jillion. Dollars.]]
'''Crowd:''' ''(gasps)''<br />
'''Crowd:''' ''(gasps)''
'''Auctioneer:''' Sir, that's not a number. <br />
'''Auctioneer:''' Sir, that's not a number.
'''Crowd:''' ''(gasps louder)'' }}
'''Crowd:''' ''(gasps louder)'' }}
* On ''[[Garfield and Friends|U.S. Acres]]'', Roy once won "one skillion dollars" while competing on a game show.
* On ''[[Garfield and Friends|U.S. Acres]]'', Roy once won "one skillion dollars" while competing on a game show.
* In an episode of ''[[Jimmy Two-Shoes]]'', when asked by Lucius how many times Beezy has saved his life, Beezy says "Twe-leven!"
* In an episode of ''[[Jimmy Two-Shoes]]'', when asked by Lucius how many times Beezy has saved his life, Beezy says "Twe-leven!"
* In the ''[[Kim Possible]]'' episode "The Big Job", Señor Senior Junior records his ransom demands:
* In the ''[[Kim Possible]]'' episode "The Big Job", Señor Senior Junior records his ransom demands:
{{quote| '''Señor Senior Junior:''' Hello everyone. If you are interested in having the five richest people in the world safely returned to you, you need to convey to us the sum of a bazillion zillion dollars.<br />
{{quote|'''Señor Senior Junior:''' Hello everyone. If you are interested in having the five richest people in the world safely returned to you, you need to convey to us the sum of a bazillion zillion dollars.
'''Shego (offscreen):''' That’s not a real number.<br />
'''Shego (offscreen):''' That’s not a real number.
'''Señor Senior Junior:''' But it sounds so impressive! And don't you like my [[Evil Laugh|evil chortle]]?<br />
'''Señor Senior Junior:''' But it sounds so impressive! And don't you like my [[Evil Laugh|evil chortle]]?
'''Shego (pushing SSJ aside):''' Hi, he's new at this. A billion dollars apiece will do just fine. }}
'''Shego (pushing SSJ aside):''' Hi, he's new at this. A billion dollars apiece will do just fine. }}
* The [[Duck Dodgers]] episode, [[The Six Million Dollar Man|"The Six Wazillion Dollar Duck"]] lampshades this completely.
* The [[Duck Dodgers]] episode, [[The Six Million Dollar Man|"The Six Wazillion Dollar Duck"]] lampshades this completely.
{{quote| '''Dr. IQ High:''' [[Artificial Limbs|Those mechanic parts aren't toys.]] They cost six wazillion dollars.<br />
{{quote|'''Dr. IQ High:''' [[Artificial Limbs|Those mechanic parts aren't toys.]] They cost six wazillion dollars.
'''Dodgers:''' Is that a lot?<br />
'''Dodgers:''' Is that a lot?
'''Dr. IQ High:''' It's so much money that we actually had to make up a number and multiply it by six just to count it. }}
'''Dr. IQ High:''' It's so much money that we actually had to make up a number and multiply it by six just to count it. }}
* The "Broadway Magic" episode of [[Jem]] had Eric Raymond offering the real amount of one million dollars to anyone who could reveal Jem's secret identity, a man from a fake sweepstakes company approached Jem with a check for one ZILLION dollars and said that the money was hers if she signed her real name.
* The "Broadway Magic" episode of ''[[Jem]]'' had Eric Raymond offering the real amount of one million dollars to anyone who could reveal Jem's secret identity, a man from a fake sweepstakes company approached Jem with a check for one ZILLION dollars and said that the money was hers if she signed her real name.
* In the ''[[Dennis the Menace (animation)|Dennis the Menace]]'' cartoon, Dennis and Joey go to watch a movie about a high-tech submarine; when Joey asks how much a submarine like that must cost, Dennis says it must be "at least eleventy-seven zillion dollars!" This is [[Brick Joke| later "confirmed" by one of the characters]] in the movie when he has an [[Imagine Spot]] with him as the ship's captain.

* From ''[[Evil Con Carne]]''; in the opening credits, Hector claims he was a "jillionaire playboy" before he became a [[Brain In a Jar]] super-villain.


== Real Life ==
== Real Life ==
* The technical name for a googol, if you were to [[wikipedia:Names of large numbers|extrapolate from the usual naming convention]], would be "ten duotrigintillion", or "ten thousand sexdecillion" on [[wikipedia:Long and short scales|the long scale (where a billion equals one million millions)]], or we could just say 10^100 and call it a day.
* The technical name for a googol, if you were to [[wikipedia:Names of large numbers|extrapolate from the usual naming convention]], would be "ten duotrigintillion", or "ten thousand sexdecillion" on [[wikipedia:Long and short scales|the long scale (where a billion equals one million millions)]], or we could just say 10^100 and call it a day.
** Hilariously, the term was supposedly coined by mathematician Edward Kasner's young nephew upon being asked for a large number.
** Hilariously, the term was supposedly coined by mathematician Edward Kasner's young nephew upon being asked for a large number.
* [[Truth in Television]]: Graham's number is so ridiculously huge that we have to use [[wikipedia:Knuthchr(27)s up-arrow notation|another notation]] to write it.
* [[Truth in Television]]: Graham's number is so ridiculously huge that we have to use [[w:Knuth's up-arrow notation|another notation]] to write it.
** If we were to use the normal notation, we'd need a new universe to write it, as this one is entirely too small. For a time it was the largest number ever used seriously in a maths proof, though it's since lost this title to other numbers.
** If we were to use the normal notation, we'd need a new universe to write it, as this one is entirely too small. For a time it was the largest number ever used seriously in a maths proof, though it's since lost this title to other numbers.
* There is an [http://forums.xkcd.com/viewtopic.php?f=14&t=7469 entire thread on the XKCD forums] dedicated to creating ever larger and larger numbers. After about 5 pages of this, the numbers being thrown around make Graham's Number seem like a speck of dust in comparison. After another 10 pages... let's just say that the numbers are so large that the math to ''understand'' these numbers gets progressively harder and harder to understand.
* There is an [https://web.archive.org/web/20130126014253/http://forums.xkcd.com/viewtopic.php?f=14&t=7469 entire thread on the XKCD forums] dedicated to creating ever larger and larger numbers. After about 5 pages of this, the numbers being thrown around make Graham's Number seem like a speck of dust in comparison. After another 10 pages... let's just say that the numbers are so large that the math to ''understand'' these numbers gets progressively harder and harder to understand.
** Probably set in motion by [http://xkcd.com/207/ this comic]. The [[wikipedia:Ackermann function|Ackermann Function]] tends to return huge values for even the smallest numbers ([[The Other Wiki]] says A(4,3) has 6.031*10^19727 digits). Now imagine Graham's number as the input. "AUGHHH" indeed.
** Probably set in motion by [http://xkcd.com/207/ this comic]. The [[wikipedia:Ackermann function|Ackermann Function]] tends to return huge values for even the smallest numbers ([[The Other Wiki]] says A(4,3) has 6.031*10^19727 digits). Now imagine Graham's number as the input. "AUGHHH" indeed.


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[[Category:Eleventy-Zillion]]

Latest revision as of 13:20, 5 March 2024

Fry: One jillion dollars!
[Audience Gasps]
Auctioneer: That's not a real number, sir.
[Audience Gasps Harder]

When your notation isn't enough, it's better to make up new numbers on the spot.

Has two popular varieties:

  1. Using zillions, skyrillions and other such words as real (but ridiculously high) numbers. Often Lampshaded.
  2. Just making up numbers when their correct meaning may be guessed: for example, "eleventy" must be 110.

Of course, there are plenty of real large numbers ending in -illion, usually formed with boring Latin prefixes - Wikipedia, as always, has a list.

Ridiculous Future Inflation can be a cause of this. Usually a Comedy Trope. Justified when a character really uses another notation. For money, compare Zillion-Dollar Bill and contrast Undisclosed Funds.

This is not to be confused with the mathematical concept of imaginary numbers, which are far more useful, especially when computing the square root of a negative number.

Examples of Eleventy-Zillion include:

Advertising

  • "Did you know women prefer Old Spice for their men one bajillion times more than ladies' scented body washes? Did you know that I'm riding this horse backwards? Hyah!"
  • There's an ING commercial where one man is carrying around a sign that reads 1.2 million dollars which is the amount that he knows he needs to have in order to live comfortably in retirement. His next door neighbor has a sign that says "A Gazillion" to illustrate that he doesn't know what he requires for retirement and thus needs the company's services.

Comic Books

Q: How many drops of water pass over Niagara Falls in a week?
A: Nine trillion multipadillion, six hundred and eighty-six squadrificillion, fifty octodecimadillion, eight hundred and sixty-three centrifipillion, nine hundred and forty overplusillion, six hundred and five duplicatillion, thirty-three impossibadillion, seven hundred and ninety-one compounded ultrafatillion, three hundred and forty super trillion, fifty-nine duper dillion, twenty-nine billion, seven hundred and fifty million, four hundred and six thousand, five hundred and thirty-three drops.

      • An easier answer would be 3, if you consider a "drop" is also a smaller fall within a waterfall.

Fan Works

Sakyo: $20 billion on the intruders.
Tarukune: Sakyo, quit bustin' my balls. Stop makin' up numbers.
Giles: A billion is a real number, sir.
Tarukune: I've just been informed that a billion is a real number.

  • According to the first episode of Ouran the Vaguely Abridged Series, Haruhi Fujioka needs "eight million jillion quadrillion malalalalilion shoo-ba-da-da-do-bop-bop-ian" in order to pay off a broken vase. Also note that value doesn't have a currency attached to it.

Film

Nancy Kendricks: Well it's going to be worth a bazillion times that.

Eddie Valiant: We were investigating a robbery at the First National Bank of Toontown. [snip] Anyway, this guy got away with a zillion simoleons.

    • Might actually be justified (and not just by Rule of Funny). "Zillion" might in fact be a number in Toon, and one wonders if there's an exchange rate for "simoleons".
      • Or you could always spend them in SimCity.
  • Undercover Brother

The Chief: Didn't you cause about a ba-zillion dollars worth of damage?

Hades: Uh, yeah, Poseidon, about a zillion times...

Trooper: Bugs, Mr. Rico! Zillions of 'em!

  • To modern ears, Back to The Future's famous "1.21 jiggawatts" sounds like this, but it's really just an outdated pronunciation of "gigawatts".
  • Austin Powers: Dr. Evil holds the world hostage for "1 billion, gagillion, fafillion, shabolubalu million illion yillion...yen". The UN deems it a reasonable price.
    • This was a reference to the two previous films:
      • In International Man of Mystery, Dr. Evil decides to hold the world hostage for "one million dollars!" A large amount of money in 1967... not so much in 1997. Number Two convinces him to hold the world ransom for the more reasonable amount of "one hundred... billion... dollars." When he calls the UN to give them his demands, he accidentally gives them the one million dollar price and they laugh in his face - and are then shocked when he gives the real amount.
      • In The Spy Who Shagged Me, Dr. Evil contacts the White House and demands the sum of "one hundred billion dollars!" He's met with ridicule because it's 1969: there isn't that much money in the entire world. He then gives the one million dollar figure and they predictably panic.
    • He also states in the third film "Why go for trillions when we can go for billions", which Scott proceeds to angrily correct. Seems Dr. Evil just really sucks at both math and economics.
  • Pee-wee's Big Adventure: "I wouldn't sell my bike for all the money in the world - not for a hundred million billion trillion dollars!" The end result is a one with 29 zeroes after it.
  • In the beginning of Toy Story, the wanted poster of Mr. Potato Head shows the "$50 bzillion" reward. Of course, the drawing was done by a six year old boy.

Jokes

  • Donald Rumsfeld briefed the President this morning. He told Bush that three Brazilian soldiers were killed in Iraq. To everyone's amazement, all of the colour ran from Bush's face, then he collapsed onto his desk, head in hands, visibly shaken, almost whimpering. Finally, he composed himself and asked Rumsfeld, "Just exactly how many is a brazillion?"

Literature

"Today is my 111th birthday: I am eleventy-one today!"

    • In this instance, it's a case of Ye Olde Butcherede Englishe — emphasis on Old English (the term was derived from hund endleofantig).
    • Also the implications that since hobbits live longer than humans, uneventfully going over a hundred, they would need handier terms for such ages.
      • Bilbo's life was artificially lengthened by the ring, so he had lived much longer than a normal hobbit.
  • In Life the Universe And Everything, the Krikkit Wars apparently resulted in two grillion casualties.
  • Witches Abroad:

"Bet you a million trillion zillion dollars you can't turn that bush into a pumpkin," said the child.
...
"Nothing. Just thinking. And you owe me a million trillion zillion squillion dollars."

  • Dave Barry once proposed that Congress should use the "Whomptillion", defined as "an amount of money so huge that every time a Congressman says the word, your taxes go up 5%".
  • In the last Ramona Quimby book, Ramona turns ten, but refers to herself as "zeroteen" because she thinks the way the first three double-digit numbers get left out of the "teens" is arbitrary and unfair.
    • In Beezus and Ramona, when she's five, she weighs herself and comes up with "fifty-eleven pounds."

Live-Action TV

Cliff Huxtable: Do you know just how much it's going to cost to fix the washing machine? A bazillion dollars.

    • "Denise Kendall: Navy Wife"

Cliff Huxtable: There is a zillion skillion babies in Heaven.

Alex Trebek: [to Keanu] Let's see what you wagered: Eleventy billion dollars. That's not even a real number.
Keanu Reeves: Yet.

    • In another episode, Alex threw out the final category and told the contestants to write down any number at all in order to win. Jimmy Fallon's French Stewart went with "threeve" and then wagered "$Texas."
  • Parodied on That Mitchell and Webb Look, in a Numberwang sketch where an "Imaginary Numbers" round is played. Somehow, while "Twentington" and "Frilve hundred and Neeb" are accepted, "Shinty-six" (depicted as fifty-six with a reversed five) is rejected as a real number, as in the popular phrase, "I only have shinty-six days left to live."
  • Timmy Mallet's children's breakfast show from The Eighties, Wacaday, popularised "squillion". This recently re-emerged when Nick Clegg used it in one of the British prime ministerial debates.
  • In the episode "Culture for the Masses" in The Goodies, Tim buys a painting at an auction for "one million billion quintillion zillion pounds and two and a half new pence", which it goes without saying that he does not have. They leave thirteen pence as a deposit. By Contrived Coincidence, the National Gallery have all their paintings insured for exactly one million billion quintillion zillion pounds. Hilarity Ensues.
  • The TV Series of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy extends a line of dialogue from the book and puts in a new number:

Ford Prefect: I think this ship is brand-new, Arthur.
Arthur Dent: Why, have you got some exotic device for measuring the age of metal?
Ford Prefect: No. I just found this sales brochure on the floor. It says, "The Universe can be yours for a mere five quilliard Altairian dollars."
Arthur Dent: Cheap?
Ford Prefect: A quilliard is a whole page full of noughts [zeros] with a one at the beginning.

  • Mr. Show featured a sketch set in the 1890s which revolved around a marching band competition judged by the "Eleventy-Twelfth President of the United States".
  • There was a series of sketches on Mad TV parodying Schoolhouse Rock and one of the songs parodied was "Three is a Magic Number". The lyrics went like:

3, 6, 9
12, 47, 90
Something, next, 100
3 times 10 is -2
3 times 5 is elevendy
3 times 2 is I dunno

Music

  • Jay-Z's "Allure":

"The game is a light bulb with eleventy-million volts"

It's been fifty-eleven days, umpteen hours,
I'm gonna be burnin' 'til you return!

Newspaper Comics

  • Calvin and Hobbes: On a math test, Calvin asks Suzie for an answer, and she responds "three hundred billion gazillion."
    • This is then lampshaded, as Calvin proceeds to snark her for giving such a "helpful" answer. Susie then follows up by saying that it's a 3, followed by 85 zeroes, and Calvin writes it down.
    • Spaceman Spiff also tends to use these kinds of "-illion" numbers.
    • When Calvin asks Hobbes for help with his math homework, Hobbes notes that it requires calculus and imaginary numbers, "You know, eleventeen, thirty-twelve, and all those." (Imaginary numbers, by the way, are a real mathematical concept, but not the way Hobbes puts it.)
  • Dilbert has "frooglepoopillion".

Tropes

Video Games

  • Billy vs. SNAKEMAN: The Eleventy Billionth HoKage insists that "eleventy" means "eleven more than everything"
  • One selling point of Borderlands was its "87 bazillion" guns (actually creations courtesy of a parts generator), which Fan Dumb has tried to explain as both a finite or an infinite number of guns, depending on who you ask.
    • The actual number of weapon combinations is quite high, but doesn't even come close to the "billion" moniker.
  • In Mother 2 (the Japanese Version), Porky's dad claims Ness' family owes him an unrealistic value, something equivalent to "hundred million jillion dollars". In the US version, it was changed to a realistic value of hundred thousand dollars or more.
  • In the starting zone for Goblins in World of Warcraft, Trade Prince Gallywick demands the player give him "a bazillion macaroons" in exchange for safe passage from Kezan. It's not stated how much this is, but even though the player is one of the richest goblins in town, he/she has to defeat mobs of bandits, steal from Gallick's estate, and torch his own office for the insurance in order to meet the price.

Web Comics

Web Original

Brazilian astronauts to visit Space Station. Bush asks how they'll fit that many up there.

Western Animation

  • Scrooge McDuck earns these amounts daily. His total fortune is given here as Five multiplujillion, nine impossibidillion, seven fantasticatrillion dollars and seventeen cents.
    • In the Dutch versions, his inane amounts always end at "...and sixteen cents" instead. List your country too if it deviates!
  • The Fairly Oddparents: Norm the Genie tries to get Timmy to order a million billion jillion dollars. Timmy says he knows there's no such number as a jillion, and wishes for the billion. Hilarity Ensues - he never said they would be "real".
  • Frosty the Snowman (1969)

Santa Claus: Now you go home and write "I am very sorry for what I did to Frosty" 100 zillion times.

    • And it's implied at the end he succeeded.
  • Animaniacs episode "Flipper Parody/Temporary Insanity/Operation: Lollipop/What Are We?": a check for 80 zillion dollars.
  • Batman Beyond episode "The Winning Edge"

Batman: Come on, he must be a zillion years old.

Senator 1: I say we fine the El Dorado Tobacco Company infinty billion dollars!
Senator 2: That's the spirit! But I think a real number might be more effective.

  • Codename: Kids Next Door:
    • In "Operation: I.S.C.R.E.A.M. Numbah Three finally finds a thermostat and promptly cranks it to the "Like eleventy bajillion degrees!" setting.
    • Chester always says he wants a buh-million dollars (denoted as $BUH.000.000), and he gets a check for that much from Mr. Boss in "Operation: U.T.O.P.I.A"; although, this is only because the heroes have trapped him in his own Lotus Eater Machine.
    • In fact, the number "eleventy billon" is thrown around quite frequently, presumably meaning 110 * 109, or 110,000,000,000. Even Father says it in "Operation: Z.E.R.O."
  • On The Penguins of Madagascar, when Kowalski is asked about a number that's less than nothing, he comes up with "neg-finity".
  • In the SpongeBob SquarePants episode "Truth or Square", the Krusty Krab celebrates its eleventy-seventh anniversary.
  • In one episode of Doug, the titular character is imagining an utterly one-sided baseball game. When he asks Skeeter for the score, his bud replies, "A bajillion to nothing."
  • In one episode of Futurama, when Fry was bidding against Mom for the last can of anchovies on Earth:

Fry: (pointing dramatically) One. Jillion. Dollars.
Crowd: (gasps)
Auctioneer: Sir, that's not a number.
Crowd: (gasps louder)

  • On U.S. Acres, Roy once won "one skillion dollars" while competing on a game show.
  • In an episode of Jimmy Two-Shoes, when asked by Lucius how many times Beezy has saved his life, Beezy says "Twe-leven!"
  • In the Kim Possible episode "The Big Job", Señor Senior Junior records his ransom demands:

Señor Senior Junior: Hello everyone. If you are interested in having the five richest people in the world safely returned to you, you need to convey to us the sum of a bazillion zillion dollars.
Shego (offscreen): That’s not a real number.
Señor Senior Junior: But it sounds so impressive! And don't you like my evil chortle?
Shego (pushing SSJ aside): Hi, he's new at this. A billion dollars apiece will do just fine.

Dr. IQ High: Those mechanic parts aren't toys. They cost six wazillion dollars.
Dodgers: Is that a lot?
Dr. IQ High: It's so much money that we actually had to make up a number and multiply it by six just to count it.

  • The "Broadway Magic" episode of Jem had Eric Raymond offering the real amount of one million dollars to anyone who could reveal Jem's secret identity, a man from a fake sweepstakes company approached Jem with a check for one ZILLION dollars and said that the money was hers if she signed her real name.
  • In the Dennis the Menace cartoon, Dennis and Joey go to watch a movie about a high-tech submarine; when Joey asks how much a submarine like that must cost, Dennis says it must be "at least eleventy-seven zillion dollars!" This is later "confirmed" by one of the characters in the movie when he has an Imagine Spot with him as the ship's captain.
  • From Evil Con Carne; in the opening credits, Hector claims he was a "jillionaire playboy" before he became a Brain In a Jar super-villain.

Real Life

  • The technical name for a googol, if you were to extrapolate from the usual naming convention, would be "ten duotrigintillion", or "ten thousand sexdecillion" on the long scale (where a billion equals one million millions), or we could just say 10^100 and call it a day.
    • Hilariously, the term was supposedly coined by mathematician Edward Kasner's young nephew upon being asked for a large number.
  • Truth in Television: Graham's number is so ridiculously huge that we have to use another notation to write it.
    • If we were to use the normal notation, we'd need a new universe to write it, as this one is entirely too small. For a time it was the largest number ever used seriously in a maths proof, though it's since lost this title to other numbers.
  • There is an entire thread on the XKCD forums dedicated to creating ever larger and larger numbers. After about 5 pages of this, the numbers being thrown around make Graham's Number seem like a speck of dust in comparison. After another 10 pages... let's just say that the numbers are so large that the math to understand these numbers gets progressively harder and harder to understand.
    • Probably set in motion by this comic. The Ackermann Function tends to return huge values for even the smallest numbers (The Other Wiki says A(4,3) has 6.031*10^19727 digits). Now imagine Graham's number as the input. "AUGHHH" indeed.