Lol, what?
Milli. Latin for 1000. There are 10 mm in a cm.
Centi. Latin for 100. There are 10 cm in a m.
Kilo is Greek for 1000. And it's literally 100 Meters in a Kilometer, even though they switch from Latin to Greek. Totally logical.
And a Kilometer is equal to 4.59×107 Planck masses. How could you not know this, you degenerate!?
LOL, WHAT?
Milli. Latin for 1000. There are 1000 mm in a m. Hence the "milli".
Centi. Latin for 100. There are 10
0 cm in a m. (Fixed that outright mathematical error for you.) Hence the "centi". (The thing there are 10 of in a meter is a decimeter, from the latin for 10. A liter of volume is a cubic decimeter.)
Kilo is Greek for 1000. And it's literally
NOT 100 Meters in a Kilometer, it's
1000.
And a Kilometer is equal to 4.59×107 Planck masses. How could you not know this, you degenerate!? Kilometer is a unit of measure that describes length, which is not the same as mass. A
Planck length can be described in meters, and there for kilometers, but a
Planck mass cannot be equated with any number of meters or kilometers (it would convert, in SI units, to a number of kilograms).
Your post definitely made a point very well. Though probably not the point you envisioned.