Your other suggestion of by one hundred times is definitely better than a. People often say that percentages greater than 100 make no sense because you can't have more than all of something This is simply silly and mathematically ignorant A percentage is just a ratio between two numbers There are many situations where it is perfectly reasonable for the numerator of a fraction to be greater than the denominator. The first example is incorrect
The second and third examples are both correct Which one you use is mostly a matter of preference, although a hundred appears more frequently than one hundred There is also another form, an hundred, which was common in the past, but has mostly fallen out of use A hundred, an hundred, one hundred: You miss 100 percent of the shots you don't take Kanter, aarp—asset accumulation, retention and protection, taxes 69
Marking or beginning a century, with the example the centurial years 1600 and 1700 But there is a word that is widely used to indicate the range of years or centuries covered by an article or book I am currently using the expression “~€100” to symbolically denote an approximate amount of one hundred euros However, i’m not sure whether the symbol ~ followed by the symbol € and the amount of. Far more annoying is $100 million dollars Are we to take that as a hundred million dollar dollars
One hundred dollars million dollars Or just assume that whoever's writing something, may not actually know how to read? It's likely to be inclusive if the situation described is notable by its presence At its heart, until describes when the transition happens The problem comes, as you note, when [time] is a span of time (like a whole day) rather than an. In general, it is good practice that the symbol that a number is associated with agrees with the way the number is written (in numeric or text form)
This source puts it simply
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