Cardinal Numbers
Hoofdtelwoorden
Cardinal Numbers in Dutch
Numbers are among the first things you will need in any language, and Dutch numbers have a logical system that becomes second nature once you learn the patterns. From counting items in a shop to giving your phone number, you will use numbers every single day.
The Dutch number system is mostly regular, but it has a few quirks that English speakers need to watch out for. Most notably, compound numbers between 21 and 99 put the units digit before the tens digit, connected by en (and). So 21 is not "twenty-one" but literally "one-and-twenty": eenentwintig. This is similar to German and was actually how English worked centuries ago (think "four and twenty blackbirds").
Once you have the numbers 0–20 and the tens memorized, you can construct any number up to 100. This article also introduces ordinal numbers, which you will need for dates and rankings.
Formation / How It Works
Numbers 0–12
These must simply be memorized:
| Number | Dutch | Number | Dutch |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | nul | 7 | zeven |
| 1 | een | 8 | acht |
| 2 | twee | 9 | negen |
| 3 | drie | 10 | tien |
| 4 | vier | 11 | elf |
| 5 | vijf | 12 | twaalf |
| 6 | zes |
Numbers 13–19
Formed by adding -tien to the unit. Note the spelling changes for 13 and 14:
| Number | Dutch | Note |
|---|---|---|
| 13 | dertien | not "drietien" |
| 14 | veertien | not "viertien" |
| 15 | vijftien | |
| 16 | zestien | |
| 17 | zeventien | |
| 18 | achttien | |
| 19 | negentien |
Tens (20–90)
Formed by adding -tig to the base. Again, some spelling changes:
| Number | Dutch | Note |
|---|---|---|
| 20 | twintig | irregular |
| 30 | dertig | from "der-", not "drie" |
| 40 | veertig | from "veer-", not "vier" |
| 50 | vijftig | |
| 60 | zestig | |
| 70 | zeventig | |
| 80 | tachtig | irregular (not "achttig") |
| 90 | negentig |
Compound Numbers (21–99)
Units come first, followed by en, then the tens. They are written as one word:
| Number | Dutch | Literally |
|---|---|---|
| 21 | eenentwintig | one-and-twenty |
| 35 | vijfendertig | five-and-thirty |
| 47 | zevenenveertig | seven-and-forty |
| 63 | drieënzestig | three-and-sixty |
| 89 | negenentachtig | nine-and-eighty |
| 99 | negenennegentig | nine-and-ninety |
Note: when the unit ends in a vowel (twee, drie), a diaeresis (¨) is sometimes added for clarity: drieën, tweeën. In everyday writing this is often omitted.
100 and Beyond
| Number | Dutch |
|---|---|
| 100 | honderd |
| 101 | honderdeen |
| 200 | tweehonderd |
| 1000 | duizend |
Ordinal Numbers
Ordinals are formed by adding -de (for 1–19) or -ste (for 20 and above) to the cardinal number:
| Cardinal | Ordinal | Dutch |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1st | eerste (irregular) |
| 2 | 2nd | tweede |
| 3 | 3rd | derde (irregular) |
| 4 | 4th | vierde |
| 8 | 8th | achtste (irregular) |
| 20 | 20th | twintigste |
| 21 | 21st | eenentwintigste |
Examples in Context
| Dutch | English | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Ik heb twee katten. | I have two cats. | Basic counting |
| Er zijn dertien stoelen. | There are thirteen chairs. | Teen number |
| Mijn oma is drieëntachtig. | My grandma is eighty-three. | Units before tens |
| Dat kost vijfenveertig euro. | That costs forty-five euros. | Compound number |
| We wonen op nummer zevenentwintig. | We live at number twenty-seven. | House number |
| Hij is de derde van links. | He is the third from the left. | Ordinal, irregular |
| Het is de eenentwintigste eeuw. | It is the twenty-first century. | Ordinal of compound |
| Ik heb nul fouten. | I have zero mistakes. | Using nul |
| Er zijn honderd leerlingen op school. | There are a hundred students at school. | Round hundred |
| Zij heeft vijftien boeken gelezen. | She has read fifteen books. | Teen number |
Common Mistakes
| Wrong | Right | Why |
|---|---|---|
| twintig-een | eenentwintig | Units come before tens in Dutch |
| drietien | dertien | 13 has a special stem "der-" |
| viertien | veertien | 14 has a special stem "veer-" |
| achttig | tachtig | 80 is irregular — drop the first "t" |
| de tweede-ste | de tweede | Ordinals below 20 use -de, not -ste |
Practice Tips
- Count aloud daily. While walking, count your steps in Dutch from 1 to 100. Pay special attention to the reversed order in compound numbers — saying them out loud rewires your brain faster than reading alone.
- Use numbers in context. Practice saying prices, ages, and addresses in Dutch. When you see a price tag, mentally convert it to Dutch: dat kost zevenendertig euro.
- Play number dictation. Have a friend (or an audio resource) say random numbers and write them down. This trains your ear for the reversed order.
Related Concepts
Concepts that build on this
More A1 concepts
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