ichi - 1
ni - 2
san - 3
shi/yon- 4
go - 5
roku - 6
shichi/nana - 7
hachi - 8
kiyuu - 9
jiyuu - 10
.....hope this answers your question
well, 1-15 is:
ichi
ni
san
yon
go
roku
shichi
hachi
kyuu
juu
juuichi
juuni
juusan
juuyon
juugo
so im guessing its the same all the way through...but probably not.
Edit: 1 ichi 2 ni 3 san 4 yon (or shi) 5 go 6 roku 7 nana (or shichi) 8 hachi 9 kyuu (or ku) 10 jyuu Japanese basically use a math equation to count: x*10+y So if you wanted 24 it would be 2 10 4 in pronunciation "ni jyuu yon". although for 11 through 19 you do not need to say the "ichi" so it is just "jyuu yon" for 14. 1 through 10 is as I just stated up there. 11-19 is "10 #" so "jyuu go" for 15. 20 is "2 10" "ni jyuu". 21-29 is "2 10 #" so "ni jyuu san" 23. 30 is "3 10" "san jyuu".
You can do this till 99.
See:
Count_from_1_to_100_in_Japanese
101 : hyaku ichi
102 : hyaku ni
.
.
199 : hyaku kyuu jyuu kyuu
200 : ni hyaku
Counting from one to ten is fairly straight forward:
一 (いち) ichi
二 (に) ni
三 (さん) san
四 (よん) yon
五 (ご) go
六 (ろく) roku
七 (なな) nana
八 (はち) hachi
九 (きゅう) kyuu
十 (じゅう) juu
Counting upward from there is even easier. You combine those numbers to make up the others. For instance, eleven is "juu ichi" - ten and one. Twenty is "ni juu" - two times ten. Thirty-seven is "san juu nana" - three times ten and seven.
One hundred is a different number - 百 (ひゃく) hyaku
From there, you would proceed in the exact same way. "Hyaku ichi" for example, is one hundred and one. One hundred and twenty is "hyaku ni juu". One hundred and fifty six is "hyaku go juu roku".
It is the same all the way up to two hundred, which would be "ni hyaku". Not only can you count up to two hundred, but to nine hundred ninety nine as well. One thousand works in the same way, by the way - it is 千(せん) or sen. You would add on numbers in the exact same way as before.
一 1 二 2 三 3 四 4 五 5 六 6 七 7 九 8 八 9 十 10 十一 11 十 二 12 十三 13 十四 14 十 五 15 十六 16 十七 17 十九 18 十八 19 二十 20 二一 21 二二 22 二三 23 二四 24 二五 25
It's more than 200 if you count cameos, Japanese-only games, and spin-offs.
no
It is counted in Japanese
175-200 excellent,and up 200 great
200
二百 /ni hya ku/ means '200' in Japanese.
Egyptian cotton usually has a 200 or greater thread count.
194
12. 13, if you count 200
25,50,100,200
It's easy to prove it for yourself. -- Get a bag of dry beans. -- Count 200 beans into a small pot. -- Walk around the block, take a nap, have a cup of coffee, and then go back to the beans. -- Count 200 beans into the pot again. -- Put away the bag. Carefully empty the pot onto a towel on the table. -- The total number from the pot is the result of counting 200 beans into it twice. The number you count now is the sum of (200 + 200), and it's also the product of (2 x 200).
Start at 200, and count to 4 on your fingers or toes.201, 202, 203,...204