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22 de mar. de 2019 · 4. null, drei; vier, sieben; achtzehn, zwanzig = ______________. 5. dreizehn, zwölf, zehn, vierzehn = ______________. Cite this Article. In this lesson, you will learn how to count in German from 0-20. This also includes exercises for basic math and writing numbers.
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Los números del 13 al 19 se forman combinando el número del 3 al 9 con el número 10 (zehn). La excepción es el número 7 (en cuyo caso se elimina la terminación en de sieben ). 13 = drei + zehn = drei zehn
Example: drei-zehn = three + ten = 13. For German numbers in multiples of ten except 30, you also say the second number first, but add ‘zig’ to the multiple. The number 30 is formed by adding –ßig to drei. Example: drei-ßig (30), vier-zig (40), fȕnf-zig (50) Join units and multiples of ten with ‘und’ as a single word
Numbers from 1 to 19 add -te, and numbers 20 and above add -ste. Exceptions are 1 (erste) and 3 (dritte) whose ordinals are based on a changed root, 7 (siebte), which drops the -en before adding the ordinal suffix -te and 8 (achte) which adds only an -e because the number already ends in -t.
German cardinal numbers are the basic numbers: we use them to indicate how much of something there is. The tricky thing for English speakers is that German numbers are flipped; for double digit numbers we say the second number first.
In English, 3 is written as “three” and 13 is written as “thirteen”. In German, 3 is written as “ drei ” and 13 is written as “ dreizehn”. We have repeated the previous numbers again below for reference and learning the numbers up to 20. 0 = null, 1 = eins, 2 = zwei, 3 = drei, 4 = vier, 5 = fünf, 6 = sechs, 7 = sieben, 8 = acht, 9 = neun, 10 = zehn
In German, the order of numbers is opposite to that in English. First comes the single digit (e.g. drei, vier, fünf...) and then the ten (zehn): null DW . The numbers 16 and 17 are slightly...