The first ten numbers are: yi (1, 一), er (2, 二), san (3, 三), si (4, 四), Wu (5, 五), liu (6, 六), qi (7, 七), ba (8, 八), jiu (9, 九), and shi (10, 十).
Numbers 11 through 19 are signified by the character for "10" followed by the character for that number. For example, fifteen is shi Wu (十五).
For the numbers 20, 30, 40, 50, 60, 70, 80 and 90, write the character for the first digit followed by the character for "10." For example, thirty is san shi (三十).
For the numbers 21-29, 31-39, 41-49, 51-59, 61-69, 71-79, 81-89, and 91-99, write the character for the first digit followed by the character for "10" followed by the character for the last digit. For example, 34 is san shi si (三十四).
The number 100 is bai (百).
If you count from one to one-hundred, you will pass nineteen six's.
don't no
if you count from one to one hundred how many ones will there be?
The translation of 'yibai' in Chinese can vary due to the accents. The most common translation would be 'one hundred'.
Lowest is "one thousand", unless you count "a hundred"
There are 21 1 if we count between one and one hundred.
21000 Twenty one Thousand not 2100 Two Thousand one Hundred. Twenty-one hundred does not count!
The number 6 appears 20 times when counting from one to one hundred.
100 in chinese: 一百 . Which is pronounced as 'yibai'. The 一 stands for '1' and 百 stands for 'hundred'. So you end up with 'one hundred'.
A hundred or (if you count ... , ninety nine, hundred) them hundred And one. In the latter case, if you leave out a in the conjuction, then thousAnd is the first.
'yi bai' pronounced 'Y-I ba-i'
一億 [yi yi].