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Numbers & Counting

How cardinal and ordinal numbers work in Spanish, English and Chinese.

Compare languages

English and Spanish number systems are similar but differ in teens formation. Chinese has a completely logical system with no irregular teens or tens. All three require classifiers or agreement when counting nouns.

Examples

1-10 basic

uno, dos, tres... diez

11-19 (teens)

irregular (once, doce, trece...)

20, 30, 40...

veinte, treinta, cuarenta...

100

cien / ciento

1,000

mil

10,000

diez mil

Ordinal (1st)

primero / primer (before masc noun)

Counting nouns

number + noun (agrees in gender/number)

Examples

1-10 basic

one, two, three... ten

11-19 (teens)

ten + number (eleven, twelve, thirteen...)

20, 30, 40...

twenty, thirty, forty...

100

one hundred / a hundred

1,000

one thousand

10,000

ten thousand

Ordinal (1st)

first

Counting nouns

number + plural noun

Examples

1-10 basic

, èr, sān... shí

11-19 (teens)

shí + number (shí, shíèr...)

20, 30, 40...

èr + shí, sān + shí, + shí...

100

bǎi

1,000

qiān

10,000

wàn (separate unit)

Ordinal (1st)

Counting nouns

number + classifier + noun

Comparison at a glance

Grammar concepts Spanish English Chinese
1-10 basic uno, dos, tres... diezone, two, three... ten, èr, sān... shí
11-19 (teens) irregular (once, doce, trece...)ten + number (eleven, twelve, thirteen...)shí + number (shí, shíèr...)
20, 30, 40... veinte, treinta, cuarenta...twenty, thirty, forty...èr + shí, sān + shí, + shí...
100 cien / cientoone hundred / a hundredbǎi
1,000 milone thousandqiān
10,000 diez milten thousandwàn (separate unit)
Ordinal (1st) primero / primer (before masc noun)first
Counting nouns number + noun (agrees in gender/number)number + plural nounnumber + classifier + noun

Side-by-side comparison

Grammar concepts Spanish English Chinese
1-10 basic uno, dos, tres... diezone, two, three... ten, èr, sān... shí
11-19 (teens) irregular (once, doce, trece...)ten + number (eleven, twelve, thirteen...)shí + number (shí, shíèr...)
20, 30, 40... veinte, treinta, cuarenta...twenty, thirty, forty...èr + shí, sān + shí, + shí...
100 cien / cientoone hundred / a hundredbǎi
1,000 milone thousandqiān
10,000 diez milten thousandwàn (separate unit)
Ordinal (1st) primero / primer (before masc noun)first
Counting nouns number + noun (agrees in gender/number)number + plural nounnumber + classifier + noun

Examples in context

1-10 basic

Spanish

uno, dos, tres... diez

English

one, two, three... ten

Chinese

, èr, sān... shí

11-19 (teens)

Spanish

irregular (once, doce, trece...)

English

ten + number (eleven, twelve, thirteen...)

Chinese

shí + number (shí, shíèr...)

20, 30, 40...

Spanish

veinte, treinta, cuarenta...

English

twenty, thirty, forty...

Chinese

èr + shí, sān + shí, + shí...

100

Spanish

cien / ciento

English

one hundred / a hundred

Chinese

bǎi

1,000

Spanish

mil

English

one thousand

Chinese

qiān

10,000

Spanish

diez mil

English

ten thousand

Chinese

wàn (separate unit)

Ordinal (1st)

Spanish

primero / primer (before masc noun)

English

first

Chinese

Counting nouns

Spanish

number + noun (agrees in gender/number)

English

number + plural noun

Chinese

number + classifier + noun

Key Takeaways

Spanish: Numbers 1-15 are unique. 16+ follow a pattern but have contractions. Numbers agree with nouns they precede. Ordinals are adjectives that agr...

English: Teens are mostly regular (thir-teen, four-teen). Irregular teens: eleven, twelve. Ordinals mostly add -th. No agreement.

Chinese: The most logical system. 11 = 10+1, 20 = 2×10, 100 = 1×100. No irregular forms. Uses 两liǎng instead of 二èr before classifiers. 万wàn is a sep...

Key concepts compared: 1-10 basic, 11-19 (teens), 20, 30, 40....

Last updated: June 4, 2026