NUMBERS
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)
- 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
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
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
- 101st - 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
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.
Exercises:
http://www.englisch-hilfen.de/en/exercises/various/numbers_digits.htm
http://eolf.univ-fcomte.fr/wp-content/uploads/grammar/numbers/06.htm
http://michel.barbot.pagesperso-orange.fr/cap/num/fig2ter.htm
http://michel.barbot.pagesperso-orange.fr/cap/num/fig1.htm
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