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  2. spanishnumbers.guide › list › spanish-numbers-1-100List of Spanish Numbers 1-100

    Here is the complete list of numbers from 1 to 100, translated into Spanish, in their "canonical" form (singular masculine noun). Click on any number to see more details and examples. Find here the entire list of Spanish Numbers from 1 to 100, with translations and more details.

    • Every Spanish Numeral
    • The Rules: 1-1000
    • Large Numbers
    • Mnemonics
    • Apocope and Gender
    • Spanish Numbers with A Decimal Part
    • Real Examples of Sentences with Spanish Numbers
    • Some Idioms Using Cardinal Numbers
    • References

    First, let’s take a bird’s-eye view. These are all the numerals you’ll ever need to learn by heart. Any other number is written as a combination of them:

    Main numbers in Spanish: units and tens

    First of all, here are the Spanish numbers from 0 to 9: Make sure you memorized them all (you’ll find some mnemonic aids below). Now, let’s see the tens, from 10 to 90: Now, you’ve learned a total of 19 Spanish numbers, right? Wrong! Actually, you know 82, because numbers from 31 all the way to 99 are formed simply by writing the tens and the units, separated by the word y(and). Here’s how:

    “Special” numbers: 1-30

    But, what about the numbers from 11 to 29? There are specific numerals for them, so you’ll need to learn them by heart. Don’t worry though, you’ll notice some patterns that will make it easier.

    Counting from 100 to 1000

    Congratulations! Now you know how to count from 0 to 99. To be able to count all the way to 1000, you just need to learn ten more Spanish numbers, the hundreds: To form the rest of the numbers, just write first the word for the hundreds, and then the “remaining” number, from 1 to 99, just as before. But what is “one hundred” in Spanish? “One hundred” is ciento nearly always. It is cien only when the number is exactly 100, or when it goes right before mil (thousand), millones (millions), milla...

    To be able to count all the way to millions, you just need to learn a couple of new words: The thousands above 1000 are written exactly the same as in English: two thousand (dos mil), and so forth. If the number is not an exact multiple of 1000, then simply add the rest at the end, just as in English:

    The Spanish numbers can be more easily remembered if you associate them with English words that have a common origin (or some kind of resemblance).

    The Spanish numbers uno and veintiuno are apocopated (shortened) when they are right before a noun, adjective or another numeral. Then they become un y veintiún, respectively: Some numerals have specifically feminine forms. These are needed when the number precedes a feminine word: On the other hand, the feminine forms are never apocopated. In the ...

    Periods, commas, apostrophes… Traditionally, several different delimiters have been used to separate the fractional part from the integer part of a decimal number. Currently, the recommended separator in Spanish is the comma, as established by international guidelines (the period is also acceptable, though). For example, the number pi in Spanish is...

    Some things you may have noticed: 1. In Spanish, any quantity which is not exactly "1", including "0", is expressed in plural form. Even when the number is "1.0", or "1.00", the plural form is also used, as in 1,0 gramos. 2. In some cases, it is correct to mix digits and letters to express a number, like in 400 millones (400 000 000) or 2,5 billone...

    ¡Eres el/la número uno! — “You’re the number one!” (the best).
    Una de dos, o pagas, o vas a la cárcel. — “One of two things is true: either you pay or you go to prison”.
    ¡No consigo dormirme ni a la de tres! — “I can’t fall asleep, no matter how hard I try!”
    Al funeral fueron cuatro gatos. — “Hardly a soulattended the funeral”.

    If you can read Spanish, in these articles you’ll find more in-depth information about the Spanish numbers: 1. The General article by the RAE's Diccionario Panhispánico de Dudas about números(numbers). 2. Specific article of the DPD about cardinales(cardinal numbers). 3. Very in-depth article about La Numeración (PDF, 172 KB), by the Spanish lingui...

    • Cardinal Numbers. A "cardinal number" is just a fancy term for a numbers we use in counting things (or indicating times, dates, or ages). Let's take a trip through the Spanish cardinal numbers from cero (0) to un trilión (1,000,000,000,000,000,000) noticing some interesting quirks along the way.
    • Ordinal Numbers. While we use cardinal numbers to count things, we use "ordinal numbers" to put things in order (such as the order in which runners finish a race).
    • Fractions. We express Spanish fractions the following way: un entero. a whole (1/1) una mitad. one half (1/2) dos tercios. two thirds (2/3) tres cuartos. three quarters (3/4)
    • Multiples. Note: Multiples can also have masculine and feminine forms: cuádruplo, cuádrupla. We use "multiplicatives" to make multiples out of a number. Spanish multiples are similar to the English
  3. Learn how to say numbers in Spanish, including both cardinal and ordinal numbers. 111 vocabulary terms with sound.

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