EngToHindi

Numbers 1–100 in Hindi

Hindi numbers — गिनती (गिनती, ginti) — with Devanagari spelling, a clear pronunciation guide, and the pattern that makes 1 to 100 click.

Numbers are the first thing you reach for when you shop in a bazaar, settle an auto-rickshaw fare, tell the time, or count out change. In Hindi they are called गिनती (ginti), and learning them well is one of the highest-value steps a beginner can take. The good news is that you only need to truly memorise a few groups; the bad news — and the reason this page exists — is that Hindi counting is far less regular than English.

In English you learn “twenty”, then build twenty-one, twenty-two, twenty-three by simply attaching the units. Hindi does not work that way. Each number from 1 to 100 has its own distinct, often unpredictable form — इक्कीस (21) looks nothing like बीस (20) plus एक (1). Native speakers simply know all hundred by heart. So the realistic strategy is to memorise 1–20 and the ten markers (20, 30, 40…), which gives you anchors, and then practise the numbers in between until they stick.

Numbers 1 to 20

The core set every learner should memorise first.
NumberHindiPronunciation
1एकek
2दोdo
3तीनteen
4चारchaar
5पाँचpaanch
6छहchhah
7सातsaat
8आठaath
9नौnau
10दसdas
11ग्यारहgyaarah
12बारहbaarah
13तेरहterah
14चौदहchaudah
15पंद्रहpandrah
16सोलहsolah
17सत्रहsatrah
18अठारहatharah
19उन्नीसunnees
20बीसbees

Counting by tens (10–100)

The ten markers act as anchors for everything in between.
NumberHindiPronunciation
10दसdas
20बीसbees
30तीसtees
40चालीसchaalees
50पचासpachaas
60साठsaath
70सत्तरsattar
80अस्सीassee
90नब्बेnabbe
100सौsau

A sample across the hundred

How the in-between numbers look — note how each is its own word.
NumberHindiPronunciation
21इक्कीसikkees
25पच्चीसpachchees
32बत्तीसbattees
44चौवालीसchauvaalees
50पचासpachaas
67सड़सठsadsath
75पचहत्तरpachhattar
88अट्ठासीatthaasee
99निन्यानवेninyaanve
100सौsau
Devanagari digits. Alongside the words, Hindi has its own numeral glyphs: ० १ २ ३ ४ ५ ६ ७ ८ ९ (0–9). You'll still see these on old currency, clocks, and in literary printing, though everyday India mostly uses the familiar 1, 2, 3.

Usage notes & common mistakes

“Half”, “one and a half”, “two and a half”. Hindi has special single words you'll hear constantly with money and time: आधा (aadha, half), डेढ़ (dedh, one and a half) and ढाई (dhaai, two and a half). “Two and a half hours” is ढाई घंटे — not “do aur aadha”.

Sava and paune. सवा (sava) means “a quarter past / plus one quarter”, and पौने (paune) means “a quarter to / minus one quarter”. So “quarter past one” is सवा एक and “quarter to four” is पौने चार.

Big numbers. India counts in lakh (लाख = 100,000) and crore (करोड़ = 10,000,000) rather than millions and billions. This trips up newcomers reading prices, so it's worth learning early.

The most common beginner error is trying to build numbers logically the way English does. Resist it — say the irregular words as whole units. The second most common slip is pronouncing छह (6) like English “cha”; it's a breathy chh-ah.

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Frequently asked

How do you say the number 1 in Hindi?
One is एक (ek). It's among the first words learners pick up and shows up everywhere — counting, prices, and time.
Are Hindi numbers written in Devanagari or Arabic numerals?
Both. Everyday India mostly writes the Arabic numerals 1, 2, 3, but traditional Devanagari digits १ २ ३ still appear in literature, signage, and formal text. The spoken words like एक and दो are the same regardless.
Why are Hindi numbers considered hard?
Because 1–100 are largely irregular — each has its own form instead of a tidy tens-plus-units rule. Memorise 1–20 and the tens first, then practise the rest.
How do you count by tens in Hindi?
The tens are दस (10), बीस (20), तीस (30), चालीस (40), पचास (50), साठ (60), सत्तर (70), अस्सी (80), नब्बे (90), सौ (100).
What are lakh and crore?
They're the Indian units for large numbers: a लाख (lakh) is 100,000 and a करोड़ (crore) is 10,000,000. You'll see them constantly in prices and news.