We went through basic number in French and in Finnish on our 3th meeting but our 4th meeting came back to the numbers since in French they have a lot, I mean A LOT more complicated numbers. I was following what Robin was saying until we reached seventy-one 😀 here, let me show you what I mean…
- More complicated numbers in French
- Vingt et un / twenty-one (20 and 1)
- Vingt-deux … / tweny-two (20-2, 20-3 and so on…)
- Trente-et-un / Thirty-one (30 and 1)
- Trente-deux … / thirty-two (30-2, 30-3 and so on…)
- Quarante-et-un / fourty-one (40 and 1)
- Quarante-deux … / fourty-two (40-2, 40-3 and so on…)
- Cinquante-et-un / fifty-one (50 and 1)
- Cinquante-deux … / fifty-two (50-2, 50-3 and so on…)
- Soixante-et-un / sixty-one (60 and 1)
- Soixante-deux … / sixty-two (60-2, 60-3 and so on…)
- Soixante-et-onze / seventy-one (60 and 11)
- Soixante-douze … / seventy-two (60-12, 60-13 and so on…)
- Quatre-vingt-un / eighty-one (4-20-1)
- Quatre-vingt-deux … / eighty-two (4-20-2, 4-20-3 and so on…)
- Quatre-vingt-onze / ninety-one (4-20-11)
- Quatre-vingt-douze … / ninety-two (4-20-12, 4-20-13 and so on…)
- Cent / a hundred
- Deux cents / Two hundred
- Trois cents … / three hundred (they’re all the same afterwards)
- Mille / a thousand
- Deux mille… / two thousand (and so on, they’re all the same afterwards)
Comments