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Well, it is mathematicS.
True. But if I'm eating from a plate containing meat, vegetables and bread, it sounds better to say "I'm eating food", rather than "I'm eating foods".![]()
And mathematics is?Except food isn't an informal contraction of a word, which tend to pluralise with an s.
I've heard that a lot, but I've never met a Briton who uses 'million' to mean anything other than 1,000,000 - i.e., the scientific standard.We say "billion", but they say "million" -- or something like that.
From answers.com:Uh...no.
Well, not anymore, at any rate.
billion said:
- The cardinal number equal to 10 to the 9th power.
- Chiefly British. The cardinal number equal to 10 to the 12th power.
"bil·lion (bAnd mathematics is?
I've heard that a lot, but I've never met a Briton who uses 'million' to mean anything other than 1,000,000 - i.e., the scientific standard.

From answers.com:
What Americans call a "billion", Brits call a "thousand million".![]()
Right, "chiefly British" however doesn't imply "regularly used by British".
I've also never encountered anyone saying million, billion or trillion who didn't mean 10^6, 10^9, and 10^12 respectively.
What we actually say is "billion"![]()

I would never accuse an Irishman of being British.
![]()
From answers.com:
Dictionaries can say what they like."bil·lion (bl
y
n) n.![]()
1. The cardinal number equal to 10[sup]9[/sup].
2. Chiefly British The cardinal number equal to 10[sup]12[/sup].
3. An indefinitely large number.
[French, a million million : blend of bi-, second power; see bi-1 and million.]
billion adj."![]()
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition copyright ©2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2009. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
What Americans call a "billion", Brits call a "thousand million".
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I've seen 'peoples' used, but only when talking about, say, the Iberian peoples (i.e., one group of people, the Spaniards, and another group of people, the Portuguese, are together two groups of peoples). I've only heard 'millions' in phrases like "There's millions of them!", and even Americans use that!I also remember reading some old British stuff where they referred to, say, "millions" where an American would refer to "million". The English would say America is a nation of 300 millions, but we would say it's a nation of 300 million. I think they're correct on that.
But I apologize for derailing onto the most boring trivia (trivias?) (trivium?) possible.

Because there are several disctinct peoples in Britain![]()
Peoples, not people.![]()
Because there are several disctinct peoples in BritainAngles, Saxons, Celts, Welsh, English, Scots, Cornish, Kentish, etc, etc, etc.
I realised about a year ago that the entire American accent (from north Canada to south US) is just a mutation of Irish. Mind = blown.
That's okay -- I meant it in jest, anyway.Unless you'd like to profess a greater knowledge of British English than the British
Didn't even Darwin write a book called, in its short form, The Preservation of Favoured Races?Because there are several disctinct peoples in BritainAngles, Saxons, Celts, Welsh, English, Scots, Cornish, Kentish, etc, etc, etc.
I realised about a year ago that the entire American accent (from north Canada to south US) is just a mutation of Irish. Mind = blown.
Did he? I've never heard of it... *cough* release the hounds *cough*Didn't even Darwin write a book called, in its short form, The Preservation of Favoured Races?
Didn't even Darwin write a book called, in its short form, The Preservation of Favoured Races?