I have written about Polish numbers on this blog before, but in several different posts (please use the search function to find them). And this time I was asked to skip all the convoluted grammar explanations and details about what declines, how and when, and just serve the numbers only, straight up.
So here they are – Polish numbers from 0 to 100:
- 0 – zero
- 1 – jeden
- 2 – dwa
- 3 – trzy
- 4 – cztery
- 5 – pięć
- 6 – sześć
- 7 – siedem
- 8 – osiem
- 9 – dziewięć
- 10 – dziesięć
- 11 – jedenaście
- 12 – dwanaście
- 13 – trzynaście
- 14 – czternaście
- 15 – piętnaście
- 16 – szesnaście
- 17 – siedemnaście
- 18 – osiemnaście
- 19 – dziewiętnaście
- 20 – dwadzieścia
- 30 – trzydzieści
- 40 – czterdzieści
- 50 – pięćdziesiąt
- 60 – sześćdziesiąt
- 70 – siedemdziesiąt
- 80 – osiemdziesiąt
- 90 – dziewięćdziesiąt
Happy counting!!! 🙂
Comments:
virtual numbers – mydivert:
hi if anyone is interested in getting any of these local phone numbers in Poland contact us at mydirect.com
carol:
THanks for the info. I need it for the kids at school. Learning a bit of Polish.
konstancja,preciouse:
my comment is that i leared my friend polish
konstancja,preciouse:
I LEARIND NOTHING CAUSE I AM POLISH AND MY FRIEND IS ENGLISH
Yan:
Interesting, polish names for numbers are really close to russian ones. And osiemnaście even reminds me how Pushkin called 18 (in today’s russian it would be vosiemnadtzat’).
Constancio Manglan:
Invaluable!! Counting means a lot could turn figures to cash, i. e rubles, pounds into. euro