Expressing Numbers in English

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EXPRESSING NUMBERS IN ENGLISH

Cardinal numbers from 1 through 1,000,000


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 one two three four five six seven eight nine ten 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 eleven twelve thirteen fourteen fifteen sixteen seventeen eighteen nineteen twenty 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 twenty-one twenty-two twenty-three twenty-four twenty-five twenty-six twenty-seven twenty-eight twenty-nine thirty 31 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 1,000 1,000,000 thirty-one forty fifty sixty seventy eighty ninety a/one hundred a/one thousand a/one million

If a number is in the range 21 to 99, and the second digit is not zero, we should write the number as two words separated by a hyphen:

25 twenty-five 57 fifty-seven 89 eighty-nine Numbers over 100 are generally written in figures. If you want to say them aloud or want to write them in words rather than figures you put and in front of the number expressed by the last two figures. For example: 203 two hundred and three (AmE: two hundred three) 622 six hundred and twenty-two (AmE: six hundred twenty-two) Remember: The British use and before tens and ones but the Americans usually leave the and out.

Numbers between 1000 and 1,000,000 are usually said or written in words as: 1,803 one thousand, eight hundred and three (AmE: one thousand, eight hundred three) 1,963 one thousand, nine hundred and sixty-three (AmE: one thousand, nine hundred sixty-three) 2,840 two thousand, eight hundred and forty (AmE: two thousand, eight hundred forty)

Notice that hundred, thousand, etc. is NOT followed by an s: two hundred (NOT two hundreds ) Four-figure numbers ending in 00 can also be said or written as a number of hundreds. For example, 1800 can be said or written as eighteen hundred. If the number 1963 is being used to identify something, it is said as one nine six three. We always say each figure separately like this with telephone numbers. If a telephone number contains a double number, we used the word double: 561 6603 five six one (pause) double six oh three (AmE: five six one (pause) six six oh three)

Saying years. We normally say a year in two parts. In the case of years ending in 00, we say the second part in hundred:

1058 1706 1865 1900

ten fifty-eight seventeen hundred and six (or seventeen oh six) eighteen sixty-five nineteen hundred

There are two ways of saying years ending in 01 to 09 before 2000. For example: 1901 can be said as nineteen oh one or nineteen hundred and one The year 2000 is read two thousand, 2006 two thousand and six (AmE: two thousand six). Post-2010 dates are often said as normal (2010 would be twenty ten).

Flight numbers. We pronounce a flight number in two parts or digit-by-digit. For example: 110 one ten (or one one oh) 1248 twelve forty-eight 2503 twenty-five oh three 3050 three oh five oh (or three zero five zero, thirty fifty)

Expressing millions. 1,412,605 one million four hundred twelve thousand six hundred and five 2,760,300 two million seven hundred sixty thousand three hundred The number 1,000,000,000. In English this number is a billion. This is very tricky for nations where a billion has 12 zeros. To avoid confusion it is better to use the terms thousand million for 109 and million million for 1012.

Ways of expressing the number 0

0 = nil in football and other sports, for scores of 0 (AmE: zero or nothing)

0 = love in tennis

0 = zero in 0 = nought temperatures in to refer to mathematics freezing point (AmE: zero) (0 Celsius, 0 Fahrenheit)

0 = oh for telephone numbers

0 = oh (or zero) for flight numbers

Note: 1. We use zero to express some numerical values such as temperatures, taxes and interest rates. 2. We can pronounce 0 like the letter o, when we are reading out numbers figure by figure (e.g. telephone number, credit card number, etc.)

Decimals. Read decimals as the given number point XYZ

2.36 two point three six 0.5 nought point five (AmE: zero point five) 0.75 nought point seven five (AmE: zero point seven five) Percentages. Read percentages as the number followed by per cent 37% thirty-seven per cent Note: The article is not written before the percentages: A virus killed the 5 % of the population = A virus killed five per cent of the population

Writing full stops and commas in numbers


Use a full stop (.) to separate the main part of a number from the decimal part. 3.062 means three point nought six two.

Say point to refer to the full stop. You can use a comma (,) in large numbers to separate the hundreds, thousands, and millions. 3,062 means three thousand and sixty two. In British English, spaces are sometimes used instead of commas (3 062). Remember: Speakers or some other languages use (,) and (.) in the opposite way the commas for the decimals and the points for thousands, millions, etc.

Ordinal numbers from 1 through 1,000,000


1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th 7th 8th 9th 10th first second third fourth fifth sixth seventh eighth ninth tenth 11th 12th 13th 14th 15th 16th 17th 18th 19th 20th eleventh twelfth thirteenth fourteenth fifteenth sixteenth seventeenth eighteenth nineteenth twentieth 21st 22nd 23rd 24th 25th 26th 27th 28th 29th 30th twenty-first twenty-second twenty-third twenty-fourth twenty-fifth twenty-sixth twenty-seventh twenty-eighth twenty-ninth thirtieth 31st 40th 50th 60th 70th 80th 90th 100th 1,000th 1,000,000th thirty-first fortieth fiftieth sixtieth seventieth eightieth ninetieth a/one hundredth a/one thousandth a/one millionth

Spelling ordinal numbers. Just add th to the cardinal number.

four fourth eleven eleventh

Exceptions:
one first two second three third five fifth eight eighth nine ninth twelve twelfth

Titles. In names for kings and queens, ordinal numbers are written in Roman numbers. In spoken English, the definite article is used before the ordinal number: Charles II Charles the Second Edward VI Eduard the Sixth Henry VIII Henry the Eighth Dates. We can say dates either with the day before the month, or the month before the day. The first of January / January the first Be careful! The second of December 2007 is written in British English like this: 2/12/07 and in American English like this: 12/2/07

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