As you know, Japanese has three alphabets: Hiragana, Katakana, and Kanji. Numbers in Kanji are also used a lot in Japan.
It is hard to remember them, but once you learn them, they will come in handy since numbers are something you will come across many times in daily life.
How to say 1 to 100 in Japanese
1 ~ 9
Number
Romaji
1
ichi
2
ni
3
san
4
yon/shi
5
go
6
roku
7
nana/shichi
8
hachi
9
kyuu
10 ~ 19
Number
Romaji
10
juu
11
juu ichi
12
juu ni
13
juu san
14
juu yon
15
juu go
16
juu roku
17
juu nana
18
juu hachi
19
juu kyuu
20 ~ 29
Number
Romaji
20
ni juu
21
ni juu ichi
22
ni juu ni
23
ni juu san
24
ni juu yon
25
ni juu go
26
ni juu roku
27
ni juu nana
28
ni juu hachi
29
ni juu kyu
30 ~ 39
Number
Romaji
30
san juu
31
san juu ichi
32
san juu ni
33
san juu san
34
san juu yon
35
san juu go
36
san juu roku
37
san juu nana
38
san juu hachi
39
san juu kyuu
40 ~ 49
Number
Romaji
40
yon juu
41
yon juu ichi
42
yon juu ni
43
yon juu san
44
yon juu yon
45
yon juu go
46
yon juu roku
47
yon juu nana
48
yon juu hachi
49
yon juu kyuu
50 ~ 59
Number
Romaji
50
go juu
51
go juu ichi
52
go juu ni
53
go juu san
54
go juu yon
55
go juu go
56
go juu roku
57
go juu nana
58
go juu hachi
59
go juu kyuu
60 ~ 69
Number
Romaji
60
roku juu
61
roku juu ichi
62
roku juu ni
63
roku juu san
64
roku juu yon
65
roku juu go
66
roku juu roku
67
roku juu nana
68
roku juu hachi
69
roku juu kyuu
70 ~ 79
Number
Romaji
70
nana juu
71
nana juu ichi
72
nana juu ni
73
nana juu san
74
nana juu yon
75
nana juu go
76
nana juu roku
77
nana juu nana
78
nana juu hachi
79
nana juu kyuu
80 ~ 89
Number
Romaji
80
hachi juu
81
hachi juu ichi
82
hachi juu ni
83
hachi juu san
84
hachi juu yon
85
hachi juu go
86
hachi juu roku
87
hachi juu nana
88
hachi juu hachi
89
hachi juu kyuu
90 ~ 100
Number
Romaji
90
kyuu juu
91
kyuu juu ichi
92
kyuu juu ni
93
kyuu juu san
94
kyuu juu yon
95
kyuu juu go
96
kyuu juu roku
97
kyuu juu nana
98
kyuu juu hachi
99
kyuu juu kyuu
100
hyaku
Whre can I get the PDF?
The PDF of the numbers is of course included in my ebook.
There is actually more than one way to say numbers, and each way differs depending on "the counter", the unique Japanese way of counting things.
For example, the number 4 can be read as “shi” or “yon,” depending on the counter; April is read as “shigatsu,” while the 4th (day) is read as “yokka,” which is completely different.
You can learn all these different ways of saying things in this one ebook.
And also, you can learn not only Hiragana and Katakana, but also grammar, Kanji, and conversation in this one ebook, so it is very convenient. Please get the sample from here.