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Definition of hundred number from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

hundred

number
 
/ˈhʌndrəd/
 
/ˈhʌndrəd/
Idioms
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  1. 100
    • One hundred (of the children) have already been placed with foster families.
    • There were just a hundred of them there.
    • This vase is worth several hundred dollars.
    • She must be over a hundred (= a hundred years old).
    • Hundreds of thousands of people are at risk.
    • a hundred-year lease
    You say a, one, two, several, etc. hundred without a final ‘s’ on ‘hundred’. Hundreds (of…) can be used if there is no number or quantity before it. Always use a plural verb with hundred or hundreds, except when an amount of money is mentioned: Four hundred (people) are expected to attend.Two hundred (pounds) was withdrawn from the account. Topics Maths and measurementa1
  2. a hundred, hundreds (of…)
    (usually informal) a large amount
    • hundreds of miles away
    • for hundreds of years
    • If I've said it once, I've said it a hundred times.
    • I have a hundred and one things to do.
    • (formal) Men died in their hundreds.
  3. the hundreds
    [plural] the numbers from 100 to 999
    • We're talking about a figure in the low hundreds.
  4. the… hundreds
    [plural] the years of a particular century
    • the early nineteen hundreds (= written ‘early 1900s’)
  5. one, two, three, etc. hundred hours used to express whole hours in the 24-hour system
    • twelve hundred hours (= 12.00 midday)
  6. Word Originlate Old English, from hund ‘hundred’ (from an Indo-European root shared with Latin centum and Greek hekaton) + a second element meaning ‘number’; of Germanic origin and related to Dutch honderd and German hundert.
Idioms
give a hundred (and ten) per cent
  1. to put as much effort into something as you can; to give even more effort than could be expected
    • Every player gave a hundred per cent tonight.
a/one hundred per cent
  1. in every way synonym completely
    • I'm not a hundred per cent sure.
    • My family supports me one hundred per cent.
  2. completely fit and healthy
    • I still don't feel a hundred per cent.
    Topics Health and Fitnessc2
ninety-nine times out of a hundred
  1. almost always
See hundred in the Oxford Advanced American DictionarySee hundred in the Oxford Learner's Dictionary of Academic English
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