"quecto-" meaning in All languages combined

See quecto- on Wiktionary

Prefix [English]

IPA: /ˈkwɛk.toʊ/ [General-American]
Etymology: Blend of q (an arbitrarily chosen initial letter) + Latin decem (“ten”) + -to (to match the final syllable of the SI prefixes from femto- downwards). Coined by Richard J. C. Brown and adopted by the General Conference on Weights and Measures in 2022 as an expansion to the metric prefixes beyond 10^(±24). Some popular unofficial terms already in use were hella-, bronto- and xenna-, but terms beginning with the same letters as existing prefixes were considered undesirable, as were as those beginning with common scientific letters such as b or x. Richard J. C. Brown suggested that the new terms begin with r and q, due to their rarity as unit symbols, and that the trends followed by the other prefixes be continued: that they be based on Latin or Greek; that large prefixes end with -a and small prefixes end with -o; that they should be in corresponding large and small pairs; and that the first letters of each prefix should be in reverse alphabetical order (as has been the case for the newer prefixes). He therefore suggested ronna- and ronto- (evoking Ancient Greek ἐννέα (ennéa) and Latin novem (“nine”)), and quecca- and quecto- (evoking Ancient Greek δέκα (déka) and Latin decem (“ten”)), because as 10²⁷ and 10³⁰ when written have nine and ten groups of zeroes, respectively. These were adopted, with quecca- changed to quetta-. Etymology templates: {{blend|en|q|decem|-to|lang2=la|pos1=an arbitrarily chosen initial letter|pos3=to match the final syllable of the SI prefixes from <i class="Latn mention" lang="en">femto-</i> downwards|t2=ten}} Blend of q (an arbitrarily chosen initial letter) + Latin decem (“ten”) + -to (to match the final syllable of the SI prefixes from femto- downwards), {{coinage|en|Richard J. C. Brown|nobycat=1|w=-}} Coined by Richard J. C. Brown, {{m+|grc|ἐννέα}} Ancient Greek ἐννέα (ennéa), {{m+|la|novem||nine}} Latin novem (“nine”), {{m+|grc|δέκα}} Ancient Greek δέκα (déka), {{m+|la|decem||ten}} Latin decem (“ten”), {{2022 SI prefixes}} Coined by Richard J. C. Brown and adopted by the General Conference on Weights and Measures in 2022 as an expansion to the metric prefixes beyond 10^(±24). Some popular unofficial terms already in use were hella-, bronto- and xenna-, but terms beginning with the same letters as existing prefixes were considered undesirable, as were as those beginning with common scientific letters such as b or x. Richard J. C. Brown suggested that the new terms begin with r and q, due to their rarity as unit symbols, and that the trends followed by the other prefixes be continued: that they be based on Latin or Greek; that large prefixes end with -a and small prefixes end with -o; that they should be in corresponding large and small pairs; and that the first letters of each prefix should be in reverse alphabetical order (as has been the case for the newer prefixes). He therefore suggested ronna- and ronto- (evoking Ancient Greek ἐννέα (ennéa) and Latin novem (“nine”)), and quecca- and quecto- (evoking Ancient Greek δέκα (déka) and Latin decem (“ten”)), because as 10²⁷ and 10³⁰ when written have nine and ten groups of zeroes, respectively. These were adopted, with quecca- changed to quetta-. Head templates: {{head|en|prefix|head=|sort=}} quecto-, {{en-prefix}} quecto-
  1. In the International System of Units and other metric systems of units, multiplying the unit to which it is attached by 10⁻³⁰ (short scale nonillionth or long scale quintillionth). Symbol: q Wikipedia link: General Conference on Weights and Measures, metric prefix Tags: morpheme Translations (SI prefix): 虧- (Chinese Cantonese), 亏- (kwai¹) (Chinese Cantonese), 虧- (Chinese Mandarin), 亏- (kuī-) (Chinese Mandarin), quecto- (Dutch), kvekto- (Esperanto), kvekto- (Finnish), quecto- (French), quekto- (German), quecto- (Italian), クエクト (kuekuto) (Japanese), квекто- (kvekto-) (Russian), quecto- (Spanish)

Alternative forms

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          "word": "虧-"
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      "code": "yue",
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}

Download raw JSONL data for quecto- meaning in All languages combined (6.3kB)


This page is a part of the kaikki.org machine-readable All languages combined dictionary. This dictionary is based on structured data extracted on 2024-12-21 from the enwiktionary dump dated 2024-12-04 using wiktextract (d8cb2f3 and 4e554ae). The data shown on this site has been post-processed and various details (e.g., extra categories) removed, some information disambiguated, and additional data merged from other sources. See the raw data download page for the unprocessed wiktextract data.

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