Numbers in English
There are two main
types of numbers:
Cardinal Numbers - 1 (one), 2
(two) etc. (Used mainly for counting)
Ordinal Numbers - 1st (first),
2nd (second) etc. (Used mainly for putting things in a sequence)
Cardinal Numbers
Cardinal numbers are
normally used when you:
- count
things: I have two brothers. There are thirty-one days in January.
- give
your age: I am thirty-three years old. My sister is twenty-seven years
old.
- give
your telephone number: Our phone number is two-six-three,
three-eight-four-seven. (481-2240)
- give
years: She was born in nineteen seventy-five (1975). America was
discovered in fourteen ninety-two
Notice how we divide
the year into two parts. This is the form for year up to 1999. For the year
2000 and on, we say two thousand (2000), two thousand and one (2001), two
thousand and two (2002) etc.
Ordinal Numbers
You can normally
create Ordinal numbers by adding -TH to the end of a Cardinal
Number.
Ordinal numbers are
normally used when you:
- give a
date: My
birthday is on the 27th of January. (Twenty-seventh of January)
- put
things in a sequence or order: Liverpool came second in
the football league last year.
- give
the floor of a building: His office is on the tenth floor.
- have
birthdays: He had a huge party for his twenty-first birthday.
Cardinal Numbers
- 1 - one
- 2 - two
- 3 - three
- 4 - four
- 5 - five
- 6 - six
- 7 - seven
- 8 - eight
- 9 - nine
- 10 - ten
- 11 -
eleven
- 12 -
twelve
- 13 -
thirteen
- 14 -
fourteen
- 15 -
fifteen
- 16 -
sixteen
- 17 -
seventeen
- 18 -
eighteen
- 19 -
nineteen
- 20 -
twenty
- 21 -
twenty-one
- 22 -
twenty-two
- 23 -
twenty-three
- 30 -
thirty
- 40 - forty
- 50 - fifty
- 60 - sixty
- 70 -
seventy
- 80 -
eighty
- 90 -
ninety
- 100 - one
hundred*
- 101 - one
hundred and one
- 200 - two
hundred
- 300 -
three hundred
- 1000 - one
thousand
- 1,000,000
- one million
- 10,000,000
- ten million
* Instead of saying
One Hundred, you can say A hundred.
e.g. (127) one hundred
and twenty-seven OR (127) a hundred and twenty-seven.
The same rule applies
for one thousand (a thousand) and one million (a million)
Notice that you need
to use a hyphen (-) when you write the numbers between 21 and 99.
With long numbers, we
usually divide them into groups of three which are divided by a comma. e.g.
5000000 (5 million) is normally written as 5,000,000
Ordinal Numbers
- 1st -
first
- 2nd -
second
- 3rd -
third
- 4th -
fourth
- 5th -
fifth
- 6th -
sixth
- 7th -
seventh
- 8th -
eighth
- 9th -
ninth
- 10th -
tenth
- 11th -
eleventh
- 12th -
twelfth
- 13th -
thirteenth
- 14th -
fourteenth
- 15th -
fifteenth
- 16th -
sixteenth
- 17th -
seventeenth
- 18th -
eighteenth
- 19th -
nineteenth
- 20th -
twentieth
- 21st -
twenty-first
- 22nd -
twenty-second
- 23rd -
twenty-third
- 30th -
thirtieth
- 40th -
fortieth
- 50th -
fiftieth
- 60th -
sixtieth
- 70th -
seventieth
- 80th -
eightieth
- 90th -
ninetieth
- 100th -
hundredth
- 101th -
hundred and first
- 200th -
two hundredth
- 300th -
three hundredth
- 1,000th -
thousandth
- 1,000,000th
- ten millionth
The
Number 0
We
normally say 'zero' for the number '0'.
BUT
when we give our telephone number, we often say O like the name of the letter
O.
e.g.
505-1023 = five-O-five, one-O-two-three
Fractions and
Decimals
We
use ordinal numbers (at the end position) to talk about fractions.
- 1/2 - a half
- 1/3 - a third
- 2/3 - two thirds
- 1/4 - a quarter (a fourth)
- 3/4 - three quarters (three fourths)
- 1/5 - a fifth
- 2/5 - two fifths
- 1/6 - a sixth
- 5/6 - five sixths
- 1/7 - a seventh
- 1/8 - an eighth
- 1/10 - a tenth
- 7/10 - seven tenths
- 1/20 - a twentieth
- 47/100 - forty-seven hundredths
- 1/100 - a hundredth
- 1/1,000 - a thousandth
Notice
that for 1/4, you can say a quarter OR a fourth.
IF we have a whole number with a fraction, we use
the word AND between the two parts.
e.g.
2 3/5 = two and a three-fifths
For parts of whole numbers, we use a decimal point
(and NOT a comma).
e.g.
2 1/2 (two and a half) = 2.5 (two point five)
If there is more than one number after the decimal
point, we say each number individually.
e.g.
3,456.789 = three thousand, four hundred and fifty-six point seven eight nine.
The exception to this rule is when we are talking
about dollars and cents (or pound and pence)
e.g.
$21.95 = twenty-one dollars, ninety-five (cents). Saying the word cents at the
end is optional.
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