This document covers numbers in Spanish, including how to use them, how to count in Spanish, and how numbers are used across the vast spectrum of the language learning process for Spanish language learners.
1. NUMBERS IN SPANISH
Why should you learn common numbers in Spanish early on in your language learning process?
You can always rely on your fingers to do the math and deploy the universal language of
pointing whilst gesticulating as much as you possibly can.
But knowing how to say and write the numbers in Spanish will enable you to communicate in a
more efficient way, conversing confidently and saving you from the entirely awkward moment
of misunderstanding.
Firstly, Spanish is ranked as one of the easier language to learn for native English speakers,
according to a language difficulty ranking chart created by the U.S. Foreign Service Institute’s
School of Language Studies.
With a dedicated effort, it should take about 24 weeks for an American, a Brit, or an Aussie to
achieve a professional level of proficiency in Spanish.
Secondly, Spanish is a phonetic language, meaning that if you can sound out the individual
letters you can pronounce the words (even if you don´t know what they mean!).
2. Therefore, once you´ve learned the alphabet you are capable of reading almost everything.
Luckily, Spanish and English are written with the same Latin alphabet, with the additional –Ññ
letter!
Finally, needless to say, numbers are a key piece of knowledge, especially in business
environments, but even as a simple and innocent tourist, you don't want either to get your theater
ticket seat numbers wrong or to be ripped off at the market.
Ordering food, booking a table or a hotel room, getting a telephone number or finding the right
address, figures are truly essential bits of information. That is why we recommend you put the
effort in memorizing them!
Spanish numbers 1-100
How to count in Spanish? Let’s make a start with the cardinal numbers noting the basic digits
from zero to ten.
3. If you already speak Italian, Portuguese, Romanian, Catalan, or French, you may notices
similarities in the numbers in Spanish, both written and spoken.
This is because each of these languages belong to the Romance branch of the Indo-European
language family and are developed from Vulgar Latin.
Now, observe the –ce ending pattern from eleven to fifteen as well as the prefix -die (derived
from –diez) from sixteen to nineteen, meaning ‘ten plus’ the following numeral.
4. From twenty to thirty figures are also written as one word:
5. However, from thirty one to ninety nine numbers are written as two words using the conjunction
–y, which means ‘and’, denoting an obvious mathematical addition.
For example thirty-two is -treinta y dos in Spanish, which literally translates to ‘thirty and two
units’.
16. Feminine and Masculine in Spanish Numbers
When using number one please note that it changes to equal the gender of the noun that it is
describing. For example:
Un cafe por favor.
Mesa para uno por favor.
Una cerveza por favor.
This rule also applies to multiples of one hundred, particularly when referring to amounts from
two hundred (doscientas cervezas) to nine hundred (novecientas cervezas).
17. How to Write Spanish Ordinal Numbers
First, second, third… Ordinal numbers are also important to be learned by heart. Spot how they
are formed using the basic digits and observe how feminine and masculine are also applied
fittingly.
20. Counting in Spanish: Why It Matters
Spanish is the second most spoken language in the world and the most common foreign language
in the United States of America. So imagine how many opportunities you will have to practice
counting in Spanish.! If you are well-traveled, the possibilities are endless!
Spanish is spoken over 30 countries on our lovely blue planet. You can check this awesome
graphic about world languages published in the South China Morning Post to see which Spanish
speaking territories you fancy visiting the most.
And if you really want to up your language game sign up today for a free trial online Spanish
lesson at Live Lingua.