Difference between revisions of "Language/English/Vocabulary/Numbers"
< Language | English | Vocabulary
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
AS YOU WILL SEE, NUMBERS IN ENGLISH ARE VERY EASY TO LEARN: | |||
*'''1 ONE''' | *'''1 ONE''' |
Revision as of 14:30, 28 October 2016
AS YOU WILL SEE, NUMBERS IN ENGLISH ARE VERY EASY TO LEARN:
- 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
AS YOU CAN SEE, FROM HERE YOU LEARN FROM 10 TO 10) IF IT'S 24 YOU SIMPLY ADD FOUR, OK?
- 30 THIRTY
- 40 FORTY
- 50 FIFTY
- 60 SIXTY
- 70 SEVENTY
- 80 EIGHTY
- 90 NINETY
- 100 ONE HUNDRED or A HUNDRED (FROM HERE YOU LEARN FROM 100 TO 100)
- 200 TWO HUNDRED
FOR 201, 202 ETC., JUST ADD THE WORD "AND" AND THE NUMBER 1,2,3,4,5. EASY! FOR EXAMPLE IF YOU SAY 305 (THREE HUNDRED AND FIVE), 824 (EIGHT HUNDRED AND TWENTY FOUR)
- 1,000 ONE THOUSAND
SAME PRINCIPLE AS THE HUNDRED. EXAMPLE: 1,071 (ONE THOUSAND AND SEVENTY ONE)
- 1,000,000 ONE MILLION
SAME PRINCIPLE AS THE HUNDRED AND THE THOUSAND. EXAMPLE: 5,438,192 (FIVE MILLION FOUR THOUSAND AND THIRTY EIGHT ONE HUNDRED AND NINETY TWO)
NB: Use the comma to separate thousands and the point for decimals.