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Chinese Numbers 1-1000 — From Zero to Confident Counting

Introduction

Ever wondering how to count huge Chinese numbers? Imagine: You are walking through a busy market in Beijing. You pick up three apples; you know how to say “three,” but the vendor replies “三块钱 (sān kuài qián)” — you get that. Later, you see a big sign: 一百二十五元 (yì bǎi èr shí wǔ yuán), and someone else bargaining says 三百零四 (sān bǎi líng sì). You start to feel overwhelmed: what does “零” (“líng”) do? Why isn’t “one hundred and five” always “一百五”?

Don’t worry. Chinese numbers are built with clear logic. With guidance, pattern-recognition, and practice, you’ll get them down fast. This guide will take you from 1 up to 1000, teach you how to pronounce them perfectly, give you memory tips, cultural insights, plus many practical dialogues and tiny challenges so you can check your understanding.

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Part 1: The Basics (1–10) — Pronunciation, Writing, Memory Trick

Number汉字PinyinTone(s)Pronunciation Tips / Common Mistakes
0零 (líng)líng2nd tone“li” like English “lee”, “ng” at end. Often used in between zeros (e.g. 1003 = 一千零三)
1一 (yī)1st toneSometimes changes tone slightly in compounds (see Tone Sandhi below)
2二 (èr)èr4th tone“er” like “are” but with a sharp falling tone
3三 (sān)sān1st toneGood to note – very clear first tone
4四 (sì)4th toneBe careful: tone must be sharp; many dialectal variations but standard is sì
5五 (wǔ)3rd tone“wuu” with low tone then rising (if isolated)
6六 (liù)liù4th toneThe “iou” is one sound, like English “leo” but with falling tone
7七 (qī)1st tone“chee” but first tone: flat high pitch
8八 (bā)1st toneA favorite number culturally! More later
9九 (jiǔ)jiǔ3rd tone“jee-oe” (one syllable) with low/falling-then-rising if isolated
10十 (shí)shí2nd tone“shi” with rising inflection; note that in “ten + something” patterns sometimes tone sandhi can adjust surrounding tones

Memory Tricks:

Pronunciation Rules & Tone Sandhi Related:

Part 2: Pattern Decryption — 11-99

Chinese uses a consistent system for numbers between 11–99. Once you understand it, you can build many numbers yourself.

Rule Formula:

Zero / Omission Rules in 11-99:

Part 3: The Hundreds (100-999) — “百” and “零” Rules, More Combinations

Once you hit 100, “百 (bǎi)” becomes the “hundreds digit” marker. You also need “零 (líng)” when there are gaps (zeros) in tens or ones place.

Basic Structure:

Zero “零” usage:

Examples Table:

Arabic NumberChinesePinyinBreakdown
100一百yì bǎibase hundred
101一百零一yì bǎi líng yīzero tens, one’s place
110一百一十yì bǎi yī shítens place, no ones
115一百一十五yì bǎi yī shí wǔhundreds + tens + ones
200二百èr bǎiexact hundred
203二百零三èr bǎi líng sānzero in tens place
250二百五十èr bǎi wǔ shítens only
273二百七十三èr bǎi qī shí sānfull three-digit decomposition
999九百九十九jiǔ bǎi jiǔ shí jiǔ

Mini-Exercise:

Convert these numbers:

Then try hearing someone say “一百零三 (103)”, “四百二十五 (425)”, “七百一十一 (711)” and writing them.

Part 4: Special Number Combinations & Slang

CombinationPronunciation
168 (一六八, yī liù bā)similar to 一路发 (yī lù fā) → “prosper all the way” Manufacturing+1
520 (五二零, wǔ èr líng)sounds like 我爱你 (wǒ ài nǐ) → “I love you” Manufacturing+1
1314 (一三一四, yī sān yī sì)sounds like 一生一世 (yī shēng yī shì) → “for a lifetime” / “forever” The Chairman’s Bao+1
888triple 8 → 大吉大利 / great luck & prosperity; often used in promotion, gifts, lucky phone/car numbers. chinatravel.com+2The Chairman’s Bao+2
666“everything goes smoothly” → used online, in red envelopes etc. Manufacturing+1
555an example of slang: sounds like 哭声 “wū wū wū”, used in chatting/messages to express sadness or whining. KnowInsiders+1

Part 5: Practice & Dialogues — Real-Life Usage

Here are dialogues and templates so you can use numbers confidently in daily life. Try reading them, recording your voice, or even role-playing.

Scenario A: Market Shopping

Dialogue:

卖家 (Vendor): “这些苹果五块钱一斤。”

Buyer: “我想买三斤。”

卖家: “好,一共十五块钱。”

Practice Variation:

Scenario B: Time & Date

Practice:

Scenario C: Phone Numbers / Addresses

Practice pronouncing long strings: phone number, postal code, street numbers. Use zeros (“零”) properly.

Additional Pronunciation / Variation Notes

More Mini-Exercise

  1. Listening Challenge: Listen to audio (or find someone) saying “三百零六 (306)”, “八百八十八 (888)”, “一千零二十五 (1,025)” etc., write them down.
  2. Flash-card Game: On one side, Chinese; on the other, Arabic + pronunciation. Shuffle for numbers 1–100.
  3. Memory Trick Round: For each “百” number from 100-999 ending in 8 (like 108, 218, 328, …), see if the “8” gives you a feeling (lucky-ness), helps you remember faster.
  4. Cultural Quiz: Which number would be best for a date of business opening? Why is 8 chosen more often than 4? etc.

Conclusion

You now have details for pronunciation (tone behavior, “零” rules, how to form tens, hundreds, thousands), many example numbers, dialogues, and cultural meanings.

To deepen:

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