OA1 Number Grammar
OA1 Number Grammar
OA1 Number Grammar
Cardinal numbers
From 1 to 12:
one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten, eleven, twelve.
From 13 to 19:
These numbers end in teen and the sound is /ti:n/
thirteen, fourteen, fifteen, sixteen, seventeen, eighteen, nineteen.
To express tenths:
You write a hyphen (-) after the tenth and then the unit:
twenty-one (21), twenty-two (22), twenty-three (23) ...
forty-one (41), fifty-two (52), ninety-eight (98)...
To express hundreds:
a/one hundred (100), two hundred (200) ....
To express thousands:
a/one thousand (1000), two thousand (2000)...
To express millions:
a/one million (1,000,000), two million (2,000,000) ...
Examples:
a / one hundred and two (102)
three hundred and twelve (312)
five thousand and ten (5,010)
two million, five hundred thousand (2,500,000)
six thousand, two hundred and seventy - nine ( 6,279)
two thousand, two hundred and twenty -two (2,222)
three thousand, three hundred and thirty -three (3,333)
One hundred and eighty-one (181)
One thousand, two hundred and fifty-four (1254)
sixty-five (65)
five hundred and sixty-seven (567)
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Ordinal numbers
1st first
2nd second
3rd third
When you express ordinal numbers in writing, you use the cardinal number
followed by the last two letters of the word for the ordinal number.
Examples:
1st (first)
2nd (second)
3rd (third)
4th (fourth)
20th (twentieth)
23rd (twenty-third)
40th fortieth
62nd sixty-second
81st eighty-first
The ending of ordinal numbers from fourth (4th) to nineteenth (19th) is -th
4th fourth
5th fifth
6th sixth
7th seventh
8th eighth
9th ninth
10th tenth
11th eleventh
12th twelfth
13th thirteenth
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14th fourteenth
15th fifteenth
16th sixteenth
17th seventeenth
18th eighteenth
19th nineteenth
20th twentieth
30th thirtieth
40th fortieth
80th eightieth
In hundred, thousand and million you add -th in writing and the sound //
(as in thing)
The tenths are joined with a hyphen (-) just like cardinal numbers, but
only the units take th (or st as in first (1st), -nd as in second (2nd) or rd
as in third (3rd)
21st twenty-first
22nd twenty-second
23rd twenty-third
24th twenty-fourth
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Examples
For decimal fractions, the British and the Americans use point:
Br / US: 23. 33 ( you must read twenty-three point thirty-three)
Now look at the following figures and observe how they are said in English:
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Computer numbers (common for business accounts and cheques). They
are said in pairs, with double numbers as follows:
Body measurements:
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