I guess I'll do it all. Here goes, kids. ichi ni san yon/shi go roku nana/shichi hachi ku/kyuu ju ju-ichi ju-ni ju-san ju-yon ju-go ju-roku ju-nana ju-hachi ju-ku niju niju-ichi niju-ni niju-san niju-yon niju-go niju-roku niju-nana niju-hachi niju-ku sanju sanju-ichi sanju-ni sanju-san sanju-yon sanju-go sanju-roku sanju-nana sanju-hachi sanju-ku yonju yonju-ichi yonju-ni yonju-san yonju-yon yonju-go yonju-roku yonju-nana yonju-hachi yonju-ku goju goju-ichi goju-ni goju-san goju-yon goju-go goju-roku goju-nana goju-hachi goju-ku rokuju rokuju-ichi rokuju-ni rokuju-san rokuju-yon rokuju-go rokuju-roku rokuju-nana rokuju-hachi rokuju-ku nanaju nanaju-ichi nanaju-ni nanaju-san nanaju-yon nanaju-go nanaju-roku nanaju-nana nanaju-hachi nanaju-ku hachiju hachiju-ichi hachiju-ni hachiju-san hachiju-yon hachiju-go hachiju-roku hachiju-nana hachiju-hachi hachiju-ku kuju kuju-ichi kuju-ni kuju-san kuju-yon kuju-go kuju-roku kuju-nana kuju-hachi kuju-ku hyaku
1 through 10 Ichi, ni, san, shi/yon, go, roku, shichi/nana, hachi, kyu, ju. 11-19 ju-ichi, ju-ni, ju-san, etc 20 ni-ju 21 ni-ju ichi 25 ni-ju go 34 san-ju yon 100 hyaku 1000 sen 10,000 man At 10,000 it gets complicated because they count in 10,000s instead of thousands. So for 100,000 they say 10 10,000s or ju-man. 1,000,000 is one hundred 10,000s or hyaku-man. Because the money system is in yen (10,000 yen equals about $85), big numbers are used really often, and they get pretty confusing.
Ju ichi
ichi, ne, san, yon, go, roku, nana, hachi, kyu, ju. (one to ten)
there are 2 ways to write them. *Either in kanji which is used for writing the date, and other simple characters used in people and place names. *or in English. here are the first ten in English: ichi (1), ni (2), san (3), shi (4), go (5), roku (6), shichi (7), hachi (8), kyu/ku (9), jyu/ju (10).
11
Heck, I could go to ninty-nine Ichi (1) Ni (2) San (3) Yon/Shi (4) Go (5) Roku (6) Nana/Shichi (7) Hachi (8) Ku/Kyuu (9) Ju (10) From there on, you could basically count to 99. For example, eleven is ju-ichi, twenty-one is niju-ichi, thirty-one is sanju-ichi, forty-one is yonju-ichi, fifty-one is goju-ichi, sixty-one is rokuju-ichi, seventy-one is nanaju-ichi, eighty-one is hachiju-ichi, and ninty-one is kuju-ichi. You can figure it out from there, but hundred is not what you think. It's hyaku.
ju-san 13 years old is ju-san sai
Ju san Ju is pronounced "jew". From 11-99 you say numbers by just putting together the first 1-10. So as an example 22 would be "ni ju ni" or "2 10 2" The list of 1-10 is: 1-ichi 2-ni 3-san 4-shi (or yon since shi is the J0apanese word for death and is seen as bad luck) 5-go 6-roku 7-nana 8-hachi 9-kyu 10-ju
hachi-jyuu-ichi
nagaome tagayome, korewa boya stepu kore ichi san ichi.
one = ichi two = ni three = san four = shi five = go six = roku seven = shichi eight = hachi nine = kyu ten = ju