Lets count to a MILLION

Oops bit late with the last one :blush:

114 model of Scania I used to drive.

115 years ago, 1893 Rudolf Diesel received a patent for the diesel engine.

116

Shakespeare’s Sonnet 116

SONNET 116

Let me not to the marriage of true minds
Admit impediments. Love is not love
Which alters when it alteration finds,
Or bends with the remover to remove:
O no! it is an ever-fixed mark
That looks on tempests and is never shaken;
It is the star to every wandering bark,
Whose worth’s unknown, although his height be taken.
Love’s not Time’s fool, though rosy lips and cheeks
Within his bending sickle’s compass come:
Love alters not with his brief hours and weeks,
But bears it out even to the edge of doom.
If this be error and upon me proved,
I never writ, nor no man ever loved.

117

F-117A Nighthawk

Primary Function Fighter/attack

Contractor Lockheed Aeronautical Systems Co.

Power Plant Two General Electric F404 engines

Length 65 feet, 11 inches (20.3 meters)

Height 12 feet, 5 inches (3.8 meters)

Weight 52,500 pounds (23,625 kilograms)

Wingspan 43 feet, 4 inches (13.3 meters)

Speed High subsonic

Range Unlimited with air refueling

Armament Internal weapons carriage

Two each of: 2 MK84 2000-pound 2 GBU-10 Paveway II 2 GBU-12 Paveway II
2 GBU-27 Paveway III 2 BLU 109 2 WCMD 2 Mark 61

Unit Cost $FY98 [Total Program] $122 million

Crew One

Date Deployed 1982

118

118.com - Get The Number You Need With 118118. Directory Enquiries

AND PAY A BLOODY FORTUNE

Other supliers may charge less

118 - whats the phone number for… :question:

119 is an emergency telephone number in South Korea, Japan and China (apparently)

120 - I knew this :laughing:

120 (one hundred twenty in American English; one hundred and twenty in British English) is the natural number following 119 and preceding 121. 120 was known as “the great hundred”, especially prior to the year 1700, from the Teutonic Hundert which equalled 120. The number 100, now known commonly as “one hundred” was then known as “the small hundred”. It is also known as ‘twelvety’ according to the number naming system invented by J. R. R. Tolkien (c.f. eleventy).

120 is the factorial of 5, and the sum of a twin prime pair (59 + 61). 120 is the sum of four consecutive prime numbers (23 + 29 + 31 + 37), four consecutive powers of 2 (8+16+32+64), and four consecutive powers of 3 (3 + 9 + 27 + 81). It is highly composite, superabundant, and colossally abundant number, with its 16 divisors being more than any number lower than it has, and it is also the smallest number to have exactly that many divisors. It is also a sparsely totient number. 120 is the smallest number to appear six times in Pascal’s triangle. 120 is also the smallest multiple of 6 with no adjacent prime number.

It is the eighth hexagonal number and the fifteenth triangular number, as well as the sum of the first eight triangular numbers, making it also a tetrahedral number. 120 is divisible by the first 5 triangular numbers and the first 4 tetrahedral numbers.

120 is the first multiply perfect number of order three (a 3-perfect number, triperfect). The sum of its factors (including one and itself) sum to 360; exactly three times 120. Note that perfect numbers are order two (2-perfect) by the same definition.

120 is divisible by the number of primes below it, 30 in this case. However there is no integer which has 120 as the sum of its proper divisors, making 120 an untouchable number.

The sum of Euler’s totient function φ(x) over the first nineteen integers is 120.

120 figures in Fermat’s modified Diophantine problem as the largest known integer of the sequence 1, 3, 8, 120. Fermat wanted to find another positive integer that multiplied with any of the other numbers in the sequence yields a number that is one less than a square. Euler also searched for this number, but failed to find it, but did find a fractional number that meets the other conditions, 777480 / 28792.

The internal angles of a regular hexagon (one where all sides and all angles are equal) are all 120 degrees.

120 is a Harshad number in base 10.

121 = 11x11 or 1 trainee 2 1 instructor

hope you dont mind me joining in,

122 The atomic number of the chemical element unbibium
I just love that name, dont know what it is though.

Bus number 122 will take you to Crystal Palace London.

123 easy as ABC apparently! :open_mouth:

124 … yet another Scania!

125 - My first motorbike was a 125 Francis Barnet :open_mouth:

126…Small roller skate made by FIAT

127…slightly larger roller skate made by FIAT

128…a roller skate made by Fiat which was slightly bigger than a 127

129 - Ordnance Survey Landranger map sheet 129 for Nottingham & Loughborough…Never Been !!

130

Allegedly the power output of a mkII vauxhall cavalier SRi

131

Psalm 131
A song of ascents. Of David.
1 My heart is not proud, O LORD,
my eyes are not haughty;
I do not concern myself with great matters
or things too wonderful for me.
2 But I have stilled and quieted my soul;
like a weaned child with its mother,
like a weaned child is my soul within me.

3 O Israel, put your hope in the LORD
both now and forevermore.

well it is sunday :stuck_out_tongue: