Those are the numbers in german,
from 1 to 10 goes as follows:
one - eins; two - zwei; three - drei; four - vier; five - fünf; six - sechs; seven - sieben;
eight - acht; nine - neun; ten - zehn
eins zwei drei vier fünf sechs sieben acht neun zehn
acht
eins, zwei, drei, vier, funf (with an umlaut over the u), sechs, sieben, acht, neun, zehn.
Counting in German from one to ten goes:-"eins", "zwei" ,"drei","vier","funf","sechs","sieben","acht", "neun,"zehn".
One is Eins Two is Zwei Three is Drei Four is Vier Five is Funf Six is Sechs Seven is Sieben Eight is Acht Nine is Neun Ten is Zehn
1= eins 2 = zwei 3 = drei 4 = vier 5 = fünf 6 = sechs 7 = sieben 8 = acht 9 = neun 10 = zehn
0 - "null" 1 - "eins" 2 - "zwei" 3 - "drei" 4 - "vier" 5 - "fünf" 6 - "sechs" 7 - "sieben" 8 - "acht" 9 - "neun" 10 - "zehn"
-29
The German word for 12 is zwölf. It is pronounced tsvolf (as in wolf).*****Almost., The o is umlauted, so it is not prnounced like the o in Wolf. The actual sound does not exist in English, but if you say something like 'ur' or 'er' you will be close
-9
eins (pronounce einz - like 'einz beans)) zwei (zvy) drei (dry) vier (fear) funf (foonf) sechs (zecks) seiben (zee-ben) acht (acht - ch in throat) neun (noyne) zehn (tzayn)
It's the German word for "five" ein, zwei, drei, vier, funf, sechs, sieben, acht, neun, zehn....