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A1 French GrammarNumbers 1-100

Master French numbers from 1 to 100. French counting has some unique patterns, especially in the 70s, 80s, and 90s which use a vigesimal (base-20) system inherited from Gaulish. Learn to count, use numbers in dates, prices, and everyday situations.

1Numbers 1-20

French numbers 1-16 are unique words that must be memorized. From 17-19, numbers follow the pattern dix-sept (10+7), dix-huit (10+8), dix-neuf (10+9). Twenty is 'vingt'. These foundational numbers are essential for all counting.

Numbers 1-20

NumberFrenchNumberFrench
1un/une11onze
2deux12douze
3trois13treize
4quatre14quatorze
5cinq15quinze
6six16seize
7sept17dix-sept
8huit18dix-huit
9neuf19dix-neuf
10dix20vingt

Examples

J'ai deux frères.

I have two brothers.

deux = two

Il a quinze ans.

He is fifteen years old.

quinze = fifteen

Le train part à dix-huit heures.

The train leaves at 18 hours.

dix-huit = eighteen

Nous avons vingt minutes.

We have twenty minutes.

vingt = twenty

2Numbers 21-69

From 21-69, French numbers follow a predictable pattern: tens word + units word, connected by 'et' for 1 (vingt-et-un) but hyphenated for others (vingt-deux). Note that 21, 31, 41, 51, 61 use 'et' before 'un'.

Tens and Pattern

TensFrenchExampleTranslation
20vingtvingt-et-un21
30trentetrente-deux32
40quarantequarante-trois43
50cinquantecinquante-quatre54
60soixantesoixante-cinq65

Examples

J'ai trente-deux ans.

I am thirty-two years old.

trente-deux = thirty-two

Il y a quarante et une personnes.

There are forty-one people.

quarante et un(e) = forty-one

La maison coûte cinquante mille euros.

The house costs fifty thousand euros.

cinquante = fifty

Elle habite au numéro soixante-sept.

She lives at number sixty-seven.

soixante-sept = sixty-seven

3Numbers 70-99 (Vigesimal System)

French uses a vigesimal (base-20) system for 70-99. Seventy is 'soixante-dix' (60+10). Eighty is 'quatre-vingts' (4×20). Ninety is 'quatre-vingt-dix' (4×20+10). This is one of the trickiest aspects of French numbers.

70-99 Pattern

NumberFrenchLiteralNote
70soixante-dix60+10start of vigesimal
71soixante-et-onze60+11uses et with onze
80quatre-vingts4×20note the -s
81quatre-vingt-un4×20+1no -s, no et
90quatre-vingt-dix4×20+10no -s
99quatre-vingt-dix-neuf4×20+19highest before 100

Examples

Ma grand-mère a soixante-quinze ans.

My grandmother is seventy-five years old.

soixante-quinze = 60+15 = 75

Il y a quatre-vingts élèves.

There are eighty students.

quatre-vingts with -s before noun

Le livre coûte quatre-vingt-dix euros.

The book costs ninety euros.

quatre-vingt-dix = 90

Nous avons quatre-vingt-dix-neuf problèmes.

We have ninety-nine problems.

quatre-vingt-dix-neuf = 99

4Using Numbers

Numbers in French are used for telling time, giving dates, prices, ages, and quantities. Note that 'un' becomes 'une' before feminine nouns. Hundred is 'cent' and takes -s only when multiplied and not followed by another number.

Number Usage Contexts

ContextFrenchEnglish
ageJ'ai vingt ans.I am 20 years old.
timeIl est trois heures.It is 3 o'clock.
priceÇa coûte dix euros.It costs 10 euros.
datele quinze janvierJanuary 15th
quantitydeux kilostwo kilos

Examples

J'ai une soeur et deux frères.

I have one sister and two brothers.

une (feminine) vs deux

Il est midi et demi.

It is half past noon.

demi = half (for time)

C'est le premier mai.

It is May 1st.

premier = first (only for 1st)

Cent euros, s'il vous plaît.

One hundred euros, please.

cent = 100 (no -s alone)