Chinese Numbers: How To Count & Talk About Numbers In Chinese
by Olly Richards
Learning Chinese sounds like a daunting task. So when they start, a lot of people are surprised to discover that many aspects of the language, including Chinese numbers are incredibly easy.
In fact, learning to count in Chinese could hardly be simpler.
Chinese numbers are extremely straightforward and follow very logical rules, meaning there are almost no traps to catch you out.
To help you get started – and to highlight one or two points you need to be aware of – in this post I’m going to tell you everything you need to know about counting in Chinese.
By the end of this post, you'll be able to count in Chinese from 1 to 9,999 and beyond, give your telephone number and deal with some trickier aspects of Chinese numbers like measure words.
Pro Tip
By the way, if you want to learn Chinese fast and have fun, my top recommendation is Chinese Uncovered which teaches you through StoryLearning®.
With Chinese Uncovered you’ll use my unique StoryLearning® method to learn Chinese through story…not rules. It’s as fun as it is effective. If you’re ready to get started, click here for a 7-day FREE trial.
Table of Contents
Chinese Characters Or Numbers?
Before we start looking at Chinese numbers, it’s worth mentioning how numbers are written in China.
Chinese has its own set of Chinese characters for numbers. But nowadays, the same ‘international’ numbers that are familiar all over the world are also used in China.
In this post, I’ve given numbers in Chinese characters along with the pronunciation in pinyin since this makes it easier for you to know how to say numbers in Chinese.
However, bear in mind that in China, you are just as likely to see them written in regular numbers as in Chinese character numbers.
Chinese Numbers 0-10
Let’s start with the numbers from one to ten in Chinese.
Here they are:
一 yī (one)
二 èr (two)
三 sān (three)
四 sì (four)
五 wŭ (five)
六 liù (six)
七 qī (seven)
八 bā (eight)
九 jiŭ (nine)
十 shí (ten)
10 To 99 In Chinese
When counting from 10 to 99, you will start to see how simple the Chinese system is.
To say 20 in Chinese, you just say “two ten”, 二十 èrshí. 30 is “three ten”, 三十sānshí – and so on.
Here are the tens, from 10 to 90:
十 shí 10
二十 èrshí 20
三十 sānshí 30
四十 sìshí 40
五十 wŭshí 50
六十 liùshí 60
七十 qīshí 70
八十 bāshí 80
九十 jiŭshí 90
If you want to say 21, you just say “two ten one”, 二十一 èrshíyī. 22 is “two ten two”, 二十二 èr shí’èr, 31 is “three ten one”, 三十一 sānshíyī – and so on.
Here is 21 to 29:
二十一 èrshíyī 21
二十二 èrshí’èr 22
二十三 èrshísān 23
二十四 èrshísì 24
二十五 èrshíwŭ 25
二十六 èrshíliù 26
二十七 èrshíqī 27
二十八 èrshíbā 28
二十九 èrshíjiŭ 29
And some more examples:
三十 sānshí 30
三十一 sānshíyī 31
三十二 sānshí’èr 32
四十五 sìshíwŭ 45
五十七 wŭshíqī 57
六十九 liùshíjiŭ 69
七十二 qīshí’èr 72
八十五 bāshíwŭ 85
九十八 jiŭshíjiŭ 99
And so on.
Measure Words In Chinese
One major difference between Chinese and European languages is the use of Chinese measure words, also known as “classifiers”. This is a big topic that merits a whole post of its own. But we also need to touch on it briefly here.
In English, if you want to count “grass”, you can’t say “one grass” or “two grasses”, you have to say “one blade of grass” or “two blades of grass”.
Here, “blade” is the “measure word” for grass. However, in English, we don’t always need measure words – we can just say “one book” or “three tickets”.
In Chinese, on the other hand, this is not possible. In Chinese, if you use any noun with a number, you must also use the relevant measure word.
For example, the Chinese word for “book” is 书 shū and the measure word for books is 本 bĕn. This means if you want to say “one book”, you have to say 一本书 yī bĕn shū. If you just say *一书 yī shū, it is incorrect.
Similarly, “ticket” in Chinese is 票 piào and the measure word for tickets (and many other rectangular objects) is 张 zhāng – so to say “three tickets”, you need to say 三张票 sān zhāng piào. If you just say *三票 sān piào, it would be incorrect – and it would also sound very strange.
Chinese Measure Word Shortcuts
Furthermore, when asking for a number of something, if it is obvious what you want, you don’t need to use the noun. You can just use the measure word alone.
For example, when buying three tickets, you could just say 三张 sān zhāng because the person in the ticket office would know you were talking about tickets. This is the equivalent of just saying “three please” in English; that you are talking about “tickets” is implicitly understood.
However, in Chinese, if you just say a number without a measure word in this context, it would be meaningless; you can’t just go into a shop, point at something and say “one” without using a measure word.
Fortunately, there is a general-purpose measure word, 个 gè, that you can use if you don’t know the correct one. This means if you want something but don’t know which measure word to use, you can just point and say 一个 yī gè, “one”, and the person you are speaking to will understand.
How To Say “Two” In Chinese
In Chinese, there are two ways to say the number “two”.
The word for “two” is 二 èr, as you have already seen. However, to say “two (of something)”, you need to use 两 liăng. To put this another way, whenever you use a measure word, you use 两 liăng and not 二 èr.
For example:
两本书 liăng bĕn shū (two books)
两张票 liăng zhāng piào (two tickets)
两个人 liăng gè rén (two people)
If you said, for example, *二个人 èr gè rén, it would be incorrect.
Counting From 1 To 9,999 In Chinese
The Chinese for “hundred” and “thousand” are 百băi and 千 qiān respectively.
And counting from 100 to 9,999 works just the same as 1-99.
“One hundred” is 一百 yībăi, “five hundred” is 五百 wŭbăi, “one thousand” is 一千 yīqiān, “seven thousand” is 七千 qīqiān – and so on.
For “two hundred” and “two thousand”, you can say either 二百 èrbăi or 两百 liăngbăi and 二千 èrqiān or 两千 liăngqiān – although the versions with 两 liăng are more common in everyday speech.
To express thousands, hundreds, tens and units, you just follow exactly the same rules, saying the numbers in order.
For example, 1,234 in Chinese is 一千两百三十四 yīqiānliăngbăisānshísì.
Here are some other examples:
三百八十七 sānbăibāshíqī 387
四千八百九十三 sìqiānbābăijiŭshísān 4,893
九千九百九十九 jiŭqiānjiŭbăijiŭshíjiŭ 9,999
If any units are “missing”, you need to add the word for “zero” – 零 líng.
For example:
两百零二 liăngbăilíng’èr 202
八千零八 bāqiānlíngbā 8,008
Chinese Numbers Above 9,999
In English, we count up to 1,000 and then repeat the pattern up to a million using tens of thousands and hundreds of thousands.
However, when it comes to bigger numbers, Chinese works differently. In Chinese, 10,000 is 一万 yīwàn, and this unit is then repeated up to ten million, 一亿 yīyì – like this:
For many people, this is perhaps the most difficult aspect of counting in Chinese. It might help to remember that in Chinese, if you write in numbers rather than characters, the separating comma divides tens of thousands rather than thousands.
This means that while in English, we write 10,000,000, in Chinese this would be written as 1000,0000. However, other than this, numbers above 9,999 follow the same rules as for smaller numbers.
Ordinal numbers (1st, 2nd, 3rd etc.) in Chinese could hardly be easier.
To form them, you just add 第 dì to the start of the cardinal number, like this:
一 yī 1 => 第一 dìyī (first)
二 èr 2 => 第二 dì’èr (second)
三 sān 3 => 第三 dìsān (third)
十 shí 10 => 第十 dìshí (tenth)
十五 shíwŭ 15 => 第十五 dìshíwŭ (fifteenth)
二十五 èrshíwŭ 25 => 第二十五 dì’èrshíwŭ (twenty-fifth)
And so on.
These numbers also require you to use the relevant measure words, so for example:
第二本书 dì’èr bĕn shū (second book)
Chinese Telephone Numbers & Hand Gestures
In Chinese, when you give a telephone number, you say the numbers individually.
The only difference is that instead of saying 一 yī for “one”, you normally say 幺 yāo to avoid confusion.
Interestingly, the telephone number for McDonald’s Delivery in China is 4008-517-517. In Chinese, 517 is pronounced 五幺七 wŭyāoqī, and this sounds a lot like 我要吃 wŏ yào chī – which is Chinese for “I want to eat”!
While everyone understands the universal hand gestures for one to five – just holding up the relevant numbers of fingers – in China, the numbers from six to ten also have special hand gestures.
Many Chinese who haven’t had much contact with foreigners might not realise that these gestures are not widely understood outside of China and will expect you to know them, even if you don’t speak Chinese.
If you visit China, it will be useful to learn these gestures – and you can check out this video to see them in action.
Chinese numbers use a decimal system with unique characters for each digit. Numbers 1–10 have individual characters, and higher numbers combine these with multipliers, like 10 (十, shí) and 100 (百, bǎi).
Chinese numbers are constructed in layers, adding value as you go higher, which makes the counting structure logical and systematic.
What is number 10 in China?
Number ten in China is 十 shí.
A Very Simple Counting System
As I hope you've seen, counting in Chinese is extremely easy – at least up to 9,999, in any case.
Since Chinese pronunciation is very different from English and you also need to use the correct Chinese tone when saying each number, I strongly recommend that you practise repeating these numbers out loud.
Practise counting from one to ten, then move on to practising the numbers from 10 to 100. And in a very short amount of time, you will see that you can quickly master Chinese numbers.
Discover the world famous story-based method that 1,023,037 people have used to learn a language quickly…
Which language are you learning?
What is your current level in [language]?
Download this article as a FREE PDF?
What is your current level in Swedish?
Download this article as a FREE PDF?
What is your current level in Danish?
Which language are you learning?
What is your current level in [language]?
Download this article as a FREE PDF?
Download this article as a FREE PDF?
What is your current level in Arabic?
FREE StoryLearning Kit!
Join my email newsletter and get FREE access to your StoryLearning Kit — discover how to learn languages through the power of story!
Which language are you learning?
What is your current level in [language]?
Download a FREE Story in Japanese!
Enter your email address below to get a FREE short story in Japanese and start learning Japanese quickly and naturally with my StoryLearning® method!
What is your current level in Japanese?
Download Your FREENatural Japanese Grammar Pack
Enter your email address below to get free access to my Natural Japanese Grammar Pack and learn to internalise Japanese grammar quickly and naturally through stories.
What is your current level in Japanese?
What is your current level in Portuguese?
What is your current level in German?
Train as an Online Language Teacher and Earn from Home
The next cohort of my Certificate of Online Language Teaching will open soon. Join the waiting list, and we’ll notify you as soon as enrolment is open!
Train as an Online Language Teacher and Earn from Home
The next cohort of my Certificate of Online Language Teaching will open soon. Join the waiting list, and we’ll notify you as soon as enrolment is open!
Download this article as a FREE PDF?
Loading…
What is your current level in Portuguese?
Download this article as a FREE PDF?
What is your current level in Portuguese?
Download this article as a FREE PDF?
What is your current level in Turkish?
What is your current level in French?
What is your current level in Italian?
What is your current level in German?
What is your current level in Japanese?
Download Your FREEJapanese Vocab Power Pack
Enter your email address below to get free access to my Japanese Vocab Power Pack and learn essential Japanese words and phrases quickly and naturally. (ALL levels!)
What is your current level in Japanese?
Download Your FREE German Vocab Power Pack
Enter your email address below to get free access to my German Vocab Power Pack and learn essential German words and phrases quickly and naturally. (ALL levels!)
What is your current level in German?
Download Your FREE Italian Vocab Power Pack
Enter your email address below to get free access to my Italian Vocab Power Pack and learn essential Italian words and phrases quickly and naturally. (ALL levels!)
What is your current level in Italian?
Download Your FREEFrench Vocab Power Pack
Enter your email address below to get free access to my French Vocab Power Pack and learn essential French words and phrases quickly and naturally. (ALL levels!)
What is your current level in French?
What is your current level in Portuguese?
What is your current level in Russian?
What is your current level in Russian?
What is your current level in Italian?
What is your current level in Italian?
What is your current level in French?
What is your current level in French?
What is your current level in Spanish?
What is your current level in Spanish?
What is your current level in Spanish?
What is your current level in Arabic?
What is your current level in Portuguese?
What is your current level in Turkish?
What is your current level in Korean?
What is your current level in Russian?
What is your current level in Japanese?
What is your current level in Chinese?
What is your current level in Spanish?
What is your current level in Italian?
What is your current level in French?
What is your current level in German?
Download Your FREENatural Portuguese Grammar Pack
Enter your email address below to get free access to my Natural Portuguese Grammar Pack and learn to internalise Portuguese grammar quickly and naturally through stories.
What is your current level in Portuguese?
Download Your FREENatural Russian Grammar Pack
Enter your email address below to get free access to my Natural Russian Grammar Pack and learn to internalise Russian grammar quickly and naturally through stories.
What is your current level in Russian?
Download Your FREENatural German Grammar Pack
Enter your email address below to get free access to my Natural German Grammar Pack and learn to internalise German grammar quickly and naturally through stories.
What is your current level in German?
Download Your FREENatural French Grammar Pack
Enter your email address below to get free access to my Natural French Grammar Pack and learn to internalise French grammar quickly and naturally through stories.
What is your current level in French?
Download Your FREENatural Italian Grammar Pack
Enter your email address below to get free access to my Natural Italian Grammar Pack and learn to internalise Italian grammar quickly and naturally through stories.
What is your current level in Italian?
Download a FREE Story in Portuguese!
Enter your email address below to get a FREE short story in Brazilian Portuguese and start learning Portuguese quickly and naturally with my StoryLearning® method!
What is your current level in Portuguese?
Download a FREE Story in Russian!
Enter your email address below to get a FREE short story in Russian and start learning Russian quickly and naturally with my StoryLearning® method!
What is your current level in Russian?
Download a FREE Story in German!
Enter your email address below to get a FREE short story in German and start learning German quickly and naturally with my StoryLearning® method!
What is your current level in German?
Download a FREE Story in Italian!
Enter your email address below to get a FREE short story in Italian and start learning Italian quickly and naturally with my StoryLearning® method!
What is your current level in Italian?
Download a FREE Story in French!
Enter your email address below to get a FREE short story in French and start learning French quickly and naturally with my StoryLearning® method!
What is your current level in French?
Download a FREE Story in Spanish!
Enter your email address below to get a FREE short story in Spanish and start learning Spanish quickly and naturally with my StoryLearning® method!
What is your current level in Spanish?
FREE Download:
The Rules of Language Learning
Enter your email address below to get free access to my Rules of Language Learning and discover 25 “rules” to learn a new language quickly and naturally through stories.
Which language are you learning?
What is your current level in [language]?
Download Your FREESpanish Vocab Power Pack
Enter your email address below to get free access to my Spanish Vocab Power Pack and learn essential Spanish words and phrases quickly and naturally. (ALL levels!)
What is your current level in Spanish?
Download Your FREENatural Spanish Grammar Pack
Enter your email address below to get free access to my Natural Spanish Grammar Pack and learn to internalise Spanish grammar quickly and naturally through stories.
What is your current level in Spanish?
Free Step-By-Step Guide:
How to generate a full-time income from home with your English… even with ZERO previous teaching experience.
Download this article as a FREE PDF?
What is your current level in Thai?
Download this article as a FREE PDF?
What is your current level in Spanish?
Download this article as a FREE PDF?
What is your current level in Cantonese?
Download this article as a FREE PDF?
What is your current level in Russian?
Download this article as a FREE PDF?
What is your current level in Korean?
Download this article as a FREE PDF?
What is your current level in Japanese?
Download this article as a FREE PDF?
What is your current level in Italian?
Download this article as a FREE PDF?
What is your current level in German?
Download this article as a FREE PDF?
What is your current level in French?
Steal My Method?
I’ve written some simple emails explaining the techniques I’ve used to learn 8 languages…
Which language are you learning?
What is your current level in [language]?
Which language are you learning?
What is your current level in [language]?
I want to be skipped!
Join 84,574 other language learners getting StoryLearning tips by email…
“After I started to use your ideas, I learn better, for longer, with more passion. Thanks for the life-change!” – Dallas Nesbit
Which language are you learning?
What is your current level in [language]?
Download this article as a FREE PDF?
What is your current level in Chinese?
Which language are you learning?
What is your current level in [language]?
Find The Perfect Language Course For You!
Looking for world-class training material to help you make a breakthrough in your language learning?
Click ‘start now’ and complete this short survey to find the perfect course for you!