How to count in French?

Several numbers

In all languages, numbers are part of everyone’s daily life. If you learn French, you will definitely need counting in French. It is not that difficult to count in French but there are some tricky parts that I wanted to share with you! I will also give you the opportunity to practice the pronunciation with audios I have made specially for this article, so continue reading 😉

Counting in French, why do you need it?

Dates and time

You definitely need to know how to say the date and time in your daily routine. If you need to make an appointment to the doctor or remember your best friend birthday, the date and time are crucial. If you misunderstand it, it is going to be a big issue, especially if it is for an interview as it will be seen as unprofessional.

We will see in another article about date and time in French. Before adding the structure, you need to know the numbers.

Shopping

You are in Paris and you want to buy your favourite pâtisserie! You can ask for the price, but the most important is to understand it. Imagine one morning you want to eat croissants for your breakfast, you go to your local bakery (“boulangerie” in French) and you want to ask for one or two croissants, what do you do if you do not know numbers?

The age

What if when meeting people, you are asked your age? or you want to ask their age? It might be a bit embarrassing if you do not understand correctly… So, it is clear that knowing how to count in French is crucial!

Traveling

When traveling you encounter a lot of numbers everywhere. First, at the airport, with the gate number and your seat number in the plane! When you visit places, you have the address where you have numbers or even the address of your accommodation. If you book for a restaurant, you need to know the time, which is numbers. Of course, in the metro in Paris the different lines are numbers. So yes, when you travel or on holiday you are surrounded by numbers!

Counting in French

From 0 to 19

It is really important you learn perfectly these first numbers because you will need to use them again above 20. You have an audio that you can listen while reading them to learn the pronunciation.

NumbersNumbers
0zéro10dix
1un11onze
2deux12douze
3trois13treize
4quatre14quatorze
5cinq15quinze
6six16seize
7sept17dix-sept
8huit18dix-huit
9neuf19dix-neuf

From 20 to 99

From 20, it will get slightly more difficult because you will need to learn how to say 20, 30, 40, 50, 60, 70, 80, 90.

For 21, 31, 41, 51, 61, you will add “et un” whereas from 22, 32, 42, 52, 62 “et” will be replaced by an hyphen.

70 and 90 are trickier:

  • 70 is 60 + 10= soixantedix
  • 90 is 80 + 10= quatre-vingtdix
NumbersNumbers
20vingt60soixante
30trente70soixante-dix
40quarante80quatre-vingts
50cinquante90quatre-vingt-dix
NumbersNumbers
21vingt et un26vingt-six
22vingt-deux27vingt-sept
23vingt-trois28vingt-huit
24vingt-quatre29vingt-neuf
25vingt-cinq

Counting from 100 in French

From 100 it is pretty easy because you use what we just learnt!

NumbersNumbers
100/200cent/deux cents100.000/200.000cent mille/deux cent mille
1.000/2.000mille/deux mille1.000.000/2.000.000un million/deux millions
10.000/20.000dix mille/vingt mille

Ordinal numbers in French

If you become first in a sport competition, how would you said it?

EnglishFrenchEnglishFrench
FirstPremier11thOnzième
SecondDeuxième12thDouzième
ThirdTroisième13thTreizième
FourthQuatrième14thQuatorzième
FifthCinquième15thQuinzième
SixthSixième16thSeizième
SeventhSeptième17thDix-septième
EighthHuitième18thDix-huitième
NinthNeuvième19thDix-neuvième
10thDixième20thVingtième

Tell me in the comments how you would write in French 174? Feel free to share this article!

A bientôt!

2 thoughts on “How to count in French?

  1. Henri says:

    This is a nice website I ever seen. 174 is written as Cent et-soixante-dix et-quatre. I just attempted writing numbers for the first time.

    Reply
    1. Berenice says:

      Bonjour Henri! Thank you for your lovely feedback. Let’s split that number:
      -First we have 3 values so we know it is one hundred so as you said “cent” is perfect.
      -Then we have “74” but let’s start with “70” which is “60+10″= soixante-dix!
      -And then to go further to 70 you continue with “eleven, twelve, thirteen….”
      -so for “74” it is “soixante-quatorze”
      -“174” is “cent soixante-quatorze”
      I hope it is clear, let me know if you have anymore questions 🙂

      Reply

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