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Basic Numbers
1 ichi
2 ni
3 san
4 shi
5 go
6 roku
7 shichi
8 hachi
9 kyuu
10 juu
Above these, yon is preferred for "four" and nana for "seven." (There are a few
exceptions, but shi is avoided because it is also the word for "death." Due to relevant
superstitions, buildings can be found without a fourth floor, room numbers with no fours,
etc.)
27 ni juu nana
35 san juu go
48 yon juu hachi
56 go juu roku
63 roku juu san
72 nana juu ni
89 hachi juu kyuu
94 kyuu juu yon
100 hyaku
200 ni hyaku
500 go hyaku
600 roppyaku
700 nana hyaku
800 happyaku
900 kyuu hyaku
1,000 sen (or issen)
1,200 sen ni hyaku
1,632 sen roppyaku san juu ni
2,000 ni sen
3,000 san zen
4,000 yon sen
5,000 go sen
6,000 roku sen
7,000 nana sen
8,000 hassen
9,000 kyuu sen
10,000 ichi man (Not juu sen. Man is the Japanese for units of 10,000. Unlike hyaku and
sen, ichi always precedes man for numbers 10,000 to 19,999.)
17,000 ichi man nana sen
18,570 ichi man hassen go hyaku nana juu
20,000 ni man
30,000 san man
50,000 go man
100,000 juu man
200,000 ni juu man
250,000 ni juu go man
1,000,000 hyaku man
2,000,000 ni hyaku man
5,000,000 go hyaku man
10,000,000 issen man
100,000,000 ichi oku (Oku is the next major unit jump when reaching ichi man man, or
"ten thousand ten thousands.")
0 zero or rei
Special Numbers
A half is hanbun.
A quarter (1/4) is yon bun no ichi, literally "one of four parts."
Three-fourths (3/4) is yon bun no san, or "three of four parts."
Two-thirds (2/3) is san bun no ni, and so on.
The days of the month are in a group all their own. Some are similar to other numbers or
counters, while some are completely unique. The final ka or nichi means "day." Please
keep in mind that these are not ordinal numbers in the English sense, and cannot be used
to express the order of other things in a series. Take note of each one; there are some
surprises.
The first day of the month: tsuitachi (some people use ippi)
The second: futsuka
The third: mikka
4th yokka
5th itsuka
6th muika (some people use miuka)
7th nanoka
8th youka
9th kokonoka
10th touka
11th juu ichi nichi
12th juu ni nichi
13th juu san nichi
14th juu yokka
15th juu go nichi
16th juu roku nichi
17th juu nana nichi (some people use juu shichi nichi)
18th juu hachi nichi
19th juu ku nichi
20th hatsuka
21st ni juu ichi nichi
22nd ni juu ni nichi
23rd ni juu san nichi
24th ni juu yokka
25th ni juu go nichi
26th ni juu roku nichi
27th ni juu nana nichi (or ni juu shichi nichi)
28th ni juu hachi nichi
29th ni juu ku nichi
30th san juu nichi
31st san juu ichi nichi
Sadly, the ancient Japanese names for the months are no longer used except in poems and
other special literature. In daily writing and conversation the number of the month with
the Japanese for month (gatsu) is used instead:
Years
Years are expressed in either seireki, the western reckoning, or wareki, which follows the
Japanese eras of the reign of the emperors. In either reckoning, the word for "year" (nen)
follows the year. Years in seireki are expressed the same as any other number; there are
no special abbreviations. This year, 2008, is ni sen hachi nen; 1996 would be sen kyuu
hyaku kyuu juu roku nen; 1872 is sen happyaku nana juu ni nen, and so on.
In the wareki reckoning, this year is the 20th year of the present emperor, and his era has
been named Heisei. In Japanese it is called Heisei ni juu nen. If you were born in 1975,
you were born in the 50th year of the Showa Era, or, in Japanese, Shouwa go juu nen. For
year conversions see my Handy Tables of Japanese Years.
If you need to express B.C., use kigen zen before the number: 723 B.C. is kigen zen nana
hyaku ni juu san nen.
Room numbers are usually read one number at a time. Interestingly, zeroes are usually
read maru, which means "circle":
Telephone Numbers
Telephone numbers are also often read one number at a time. A very clever invention the
Japanese have, however, is saying no where hyphens usually are. This makes listening to
a long number easier. For example, 067-892-7813 would be read: zero roku nana no
hachi kyuu ni no nana hachi ichi san.
Flight Numbers
Trains and buses use gou after their numbers, not bin.
Counting
There is a set of what could be loosely called "ordinal numbers" which are sometimes
used for counting up to ten items. Similarities will be found between these and the days
of the months introduced above:
1 hitotsu
2 futatsu
3 mittsu
4 yottsu
5 itsutsu
6 muttsu
7 nanatsu
8 yattsu
9 kokonotsu
10 tou
These are used mainly by small children to count things or say how old they are. Adults
will sometimes use these in short requests or replies:
However, it will sometimes be preferable to use the correct counter when counting
things, especially in formal settings. The counter for batteries and similar irregularly-
shaped, relatively small objects is ko. Counters are used with the basic numbers which
were introduced at the top of this page. Here is the previous conversation made a bit more
formal:
There are many of these counters — many more than are mentioned on this page. These
should be considered the absolutely essential ones that you need to learn and master
first. The more counters you memorize and use correctly, the more literate and fluent you
will sound.
ko
Ko was just mentioned. It is used to count things like apples, oranges, blocks, boxes, and
many other things which are pretty much the same size in all dimensions. People often
use ko in place of other counters. If you use ko to count bananas instead of the technically
correct hon, it's no big deal, but using it to count cars or animals would really show a lack
of knowledge.
hon
Use hon for relatively long and narrow things: pens, pencils, rulers, sticks, bottles, etc.
Take note how the pronunciation changes according to the number:
1 ippon
2 ni hon
3 san bon
4 yon hon
5 go hon
6 roppon
7 nana hon
8 happon
9 kyuu hon
10 juppon
Boku wa enpitsu ni hon motte iru kara, ippon kashite ageru. (I have two pencils so
I'll lend you one.)
Note how the number of an item retains its counter even when the name of the item is
known and omitted.
Please keep in mind that this is a general guide and there will be people who use other
expressions. For example, there are people who will say hachi hon instead of happon.
This applies to everything on this page.
hai
Hai is for cups or glasses filled with a drink: ippai, ni hai, san bai:
Small animals up to dogs use hiki: ippiki, ni hiki, san biki, yon hiki, go hiki
Larger animals from sheep on up use tou: ittou, ni tou, san tou
Birds use wa: ichi wa, ni wa, san wa
Fish use bi: ichi bi, ni bi, san bi
Watashi no itoko wa inu san biki, neko happiki to niwatori go wa o katte imasu.
(My cousin has three dogs, eight cats, and five chickens.)
For people use hitori for one person, futari for two people, and then the counter nin for
three or more:
Futari no ane to san nin no otouto ga imasu. (I have two big sisters and three little
brothers.)
Telling Time
For time, add ji after the hour and fun/pun after the minutes:
Four o'clock is yoji, not yonji. Also, han (meaning "half") is often used for 30 minutes:
Periods of Time
years: ichi nen kan, ni nen kan, san nen kan, etc.
months: ikka getsu kan, ni ka getsu kan, san ka getsu kan, etc.
weeks: isshuu kan, ni shuu kan, san shuu kan, etc.
days: ichi nichi (kan is usually omitted), futsuka kan, mikka kan, etc., following their
names as days of the month.
hours: ichi jikan, ni jikan, san jikan, etc.
minutes: ippun kan, ni fun kan, san pun kan, etc.
seconds: ichi byou, ni byou, san byou, etc.
Kare wa juu ni nen kan doitsu ni sunda. (He lived in Germany for 12 years.)
Chiisai koro, natsu yasumi wa san ka getsu kan datta. (When I was little our
summer vacations were three months long.)
Sono shigoto wa ni jikan han kakarimashita. (That job took two and a half hours to
do.)
Bokutachi wa ni ka getsu ni ikkai bouringu o yaru. (We go bowling every two months.)
Watashi wa nen ni ni kai amerika ni iku. (I go to America twice a year.)
Numbers in Succession
Imouto wa migi kara san ban me desu. (My sister is the third one from the right.)
Vague Numbers