English Numbers 1-100
Use this focused chart to study the core English numbers from 1 to 100. These are the numbers you are most likely to hear in prices, ages, addresses, dates, times, and basic conversation.
| Numeral | Cardinal | Ordinal |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | one | first |
| 2 | two | second |
| 3 | three | third |
| 4 | four | fourth |
| 5 | five | fifth |
| 6 | six | sixth |
| 7 | seven | seventh |
| 8 | eight | eighth |
| 9 | nine | ninth |
| 10 | ten | tenth |
| 11 | eleven | eleventh |
| 12 | twelve | twelfth |
| 13 | thirteen | thirteenth |
| 14 | fourteen | fourteenth |
| 15 | fifteen | fifteenth |
| 16 | sixteen | sixteenth |
| 17 | seventeen | seventeenth |
| 18 | eighteen | eighteenth |
| 19 | nineteen | nineteenth |
| 20 | twenty | twentieth |
| 21 | twenty-one | twenty-first |
| 30 | thirty | thirtieth |
| 40 | forty | fortieth |
| 50 | fifty | fiftieth |
| 60 | sixty | sixtieth |
| 70 | seventy | seventieth |
| 80 | eighty | eightieth |
| 90 | ninety | ninetieth |
| 100 | one hundred | one hundredth |
What to watch for
English numbers seem simple but have hidden traps for learners. The teens (13-19) and tens (30-90) sound dangerously similar: "thirteen" vs "thirty," "fourteen" vs "forty." The stress pattern is the only difference, and it is easily lost in noisy environments or phone calls. Ordinals are largely irregular for the first few (first, second, third) before becoming regular (-th). Large numbers use a different grouping than many other languages — billion means a thousand million, not a million million as in some European countries.
Study tip
Pay close attention to the stress difference between teens and tens: thirTEEN has stress on the second syllable, while THIRty stresses the first. Practice with phone numbers and addresses since these are the most common real-world encounters. Learn the irregular ordinals (first through twelfth) as a group. For large numbers, get comfortable with the thousand-million-billion progression.