Doesn't matter, your explanation is better than mine!
And still EulerFan smashes our explanations combined, lol -.-
Nah, I've just done units of maths where infinity as a concept has been discussed.

In fact, it's really quite amazing just how infinity works. If you take the two number sets, the natural numbers and the integers, one would assume that the integers are twice as big as the natural numbers. HOWEVER, it is possible to make a construction where the two sets have a one-to-one correspondence - that is to say, they have the same "size". Even the rational numbers isn't any bigger, and this defines a level of infinity we call "countable".
Even more impressive is an "uncountable" infinity. The real numbers ARE bigger than the natural numbers, but they're SO big that even the interval [0, 1] is shown to have the same "size" as ALL the real numbers (as someone mentioned earlier - Conic, I think?)
Even the quotient

isn't well defined, and to try and figure out what the answer is we often talk about "rates", where we consider the numerator and denominator as functions, and see how "fast" each function moves off to infinity. For example,

is ALWAYS infinity, just because the exponential function is so much faster than any polynomial. However,

is one, because both functions move off at the same rate.
And I could ramble about this forever and ever, moving from topic to topic about things that don't seem to really relate at all, buuuuut there are much better ways to waste your time, hahah.