-yllion (pronounced ) is a proposal from Donald Knuth for the terminology and symbols of an alternate decimal superbase system. In it, he adapts the familiar English terms for large numbers to provide a systematic set of names for much larger numbers. In addition to providing an extended range, -yllion also dodges the long and short scale ambiguity of -illion.
Knuth's digit grouping is exponential instead of linear; each division doubles the number of digits handled, whereas the familiar system only adds three or six more. His system is basically the same as one of the ancient and now-unused Chinese numeral systems, in which units stand for 10<sup>4</sup>, 10<sup>8</sup>, 10<sup>16</sup>, 10<sup>32</sup>, ..., 10<sup>2<sup>n</sup></sup>, and so on (with an exception that the -yllion proposal does not use a word for thousand which the original Chinese numeral system has). Today the corresponding Chinese characters are used for 10<sup>4</sup>, 10<sup>8</sup>, 10<sup>12</sup>, 10<sup>16</sup>, and so on.
In Knuth's -yllion proposal:
Each new number name is the square of the previous one â therefore, each new name covers twice as many digits. Knuth continues borrowing the traditional names changing "illion" to "yllion" on each one. Abstractly, then, "one <var>n</var>-yllion" is . "One trigintyllion" () would have 2<sup>32</sup> + 1, or 42;9496,7297, or nearly forty-three myllion (4300 million) digits (by contrast, a conventional "trigintillion" has merely 94 digits — not even a hundred, let alone a thousand million, and still 7 digits short of a googol). Better yet, "one centyllion" () would have 2<sup>102</sup> + 1, or 507,0602;4009,1291:7605,9868;1282,1505, or about 1/20 of a tryllion digits, whereas a conventional "centillion" has only 304 digits.
The corresponding Chinese "long scale" numerals are given, with the traditional form listed before the simplified form. Same numerals are used in the Ancient Greek numeral system, and also the Chinese "short scale" (new number name every power of 10 after 1000 (or 10<sup>3+n</sup>)), "myriad scale" (new number name every 10<sup>4n</sup>), and "mid scale" (new number name every 10<sup>8n</sup>). Today these Chinese numerals are still in use, but are used in their "myriad scale" values, which is also used in Japanese and in Korean. For a more extensive table, see Myriad system.
In order to construct names of the form <var>n</var>-yllion for large values of n, Knuth appends the prefix "latin-" to the name of n without spaces and uses that as the prefix for n. For example, the number "latintwohundredyllion" corresponds to n = 200, and hence to the number .
To refer to small quantities with this system, the suffix -th is used.
For instance, is a myriadth. is a vigintyllionth.