1 un (Uhn)
2 deux (Deh)
3 trois (Twa)
4 quarte (Catre)
5 cinq (Sank)
6 six (Sees)
7 sept (Set)
8 huit (Wheat)
9 neuf (Nerf)
10 dix (Dees)
11 onze (Onz)
12 douze (Douz)
13 treize (Treiz)
14 quatorze (Cat-Orze)
15 quinze (Quinz)
16 seize (Sez)
17 dix-sept (Dis - set)
18 dix-huit (Dis - wheat)
19 dix-neuf (Dis - nerf)
20 vignt (Vangt)
21 vignt et un (Vangt e uh)
22 vignt deux (Vangt de) I'll carry on improving this when I get back..
23 vignt trois
24 vignt quatre
25 vignt cinq
26 vignt six
27 vignt sept
28 vignt huit
29 vignt neuf
30 trente (Twenty, thirty, forty, and fifty are all the same when you are doing twenty one and such)
40 Quarante
50 Cinqante
"Thirty to fifty" is "trente à cinquante" in French.
In French, you would say "cinq heures cinquante du soir" to express 5:50 PM.
It's spelled "cinquante." You would pronounce it something like "sank-awnt"
You can say "dans les années 50" in French to refer to the 1950s decade.
In French, all nouns have a gender (masculine or feminine) regardless of the actual gender of the object they represent. This grammatical concept does not imply that French people are feminine in character or behavior. It is simply a linguistic feature of the French language.
"Thirty to fifty" is "trente à cinquante" in French.
50 French Francs = 10.3 USD
In French, you would say "cinq heures cinquante du soir" to express 5:50 PM.
cinquante
cinquante
cinquante
French Paper Company's population is 50.
It's spelled "cinquante." You would pronounce it something like "sank-awnt"
cinquante
"Cinquante centimes."
50 -- cinquante -- "seh[n]-kah[n]t"
il a cinquante ans.