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Numerals

Numerals are particles that express number. There are thirteen numerals in Esperanto:

nul
0
unu
1
du
2
tri
3
kvar
4
kvin
5
ses
6
sep
7
ok
8
naŭ
9
dek
10
cent
100
mil
1000

Other numbers are expressed using combinations of the numerals. Numbers are given using how may thousands, then how many hundreds, then how many tens, and finally, how many ones:

11
dek unu
12
dek du
13
dek tri
14
dek kvar
15
dek kvin
16
dek ses
17
dek sep
18
dek ok
19
dek naŭ
20
dudek
21
dudek unu
22
dudek du
23
dudek tri
30
tridek
40
kvardek
50
kvindek
60
sesdek
70
sepdek
80
okdek
90
naŭdek
100
cent
101
cent unu
110
cent dek
111
cent dek unu
200
ducent
232
ducent tridek du
300
tricent
400
kvarcent
500
kvincent
600
sescent
700
sepcent
800
okcent
900
naŭcent
1000
mil
1001
mil unu
1011
mil dek unu
1111
mil cent dek unu
1234
mil ducent tridek kvar
2000
du mil
2678
du mil sescent sepdek ok
3000
tri mil
4000
kvar mil
5000
kvin mil
6000
ses mil
7000
sep mil
8000
ok mil
9000
naŭ mil
10000
dek mil
11000
dek unu mil
12000
dek du mil
20000
dudek mil
30000
tridek mil
42000
kvardek du mil
999000
naŭcent naŭdek naŭ mil
999999
naŭcent naŭdek naŭ mil naŭcent naŭdek naŭ

Tens and hundreds are written (and pronounced) together, as one word: dudek, tridek, ducent, tricent etc. Everything else should be written as separate words, including thousands.

Tens and hundreds, like other words, are pronounced with an accent on the second to last vowel: dUdek, trIdek, dUcent, trIcent Everything else is pronounced as separate words: dEk dU, dEk trI, cEnt dU, cEnt trI, cEnt dEk dU, dU mIl, trI mIl, dU mIl dEk dU.

If a compound word is created from these basic numerical expressions, for example, substantival number words or adjectival number words, it is possible or obligatory to write the words joined together, with hyphens as necessary.

Nul (zero) was originally a noun: nulo (the name of the number 0). But it has been used for a long time as a numeral without an ending, like in: 0,5 = nul komo kvin (or nulo komo kvin).

In some cases the abbreviated form un' may be used instead of unu.

Use of numerals

Numerals most frequently appear as epithets of nouns. The numbers then don't receive the N or J endings:

  • Mi havas nur unu buŝon, sed mi havas du orelojn. - I have only one mouth, but I have two ears.
  • Li faris ĉion per la dek fingroj de siaj manoj. - He does everything with the ten fingers of his hands.
  • Li havas dek unu infanojn. - He has eleven children.
  • Sesdek minutoj faras unu horon, kaj unu minuto konsistas el sesdek sekundoj. - Sixty minutes makes one hour, and one minute consists of sixty seconds.

Sometimes the noun is omitted (but understood through context):

  • Nu, se vi ne havas mil [rublojn], mi petas cent rublojn. - Well, if you have a thousand [roubles], I'll ask for a hundred roubles.
  • Kiun el la tri [aferoj/personoj] vi elektas? - Which of the three [things/people] do you pick?

Nul (zero) normally appears as a numerical epithet only before units of measure:

  • La frostpunkto de akvo estas nul gradoj ĉe norma atmosfera premo. - The freezing point of water is zero degrees under normal atmospheric pressure.

    We usually write 0 gradoj, but pronounce it as nul gradoj.

  • Ilia fina rezulto estis nul poentoj. - Their final result was zero points.

In other instances, neniu (no, none, no one) is normally used: Mi havas neniun malamikon.

Numerals can also appear independently to fulfill various roles in a sentence. They often act as nouns. They are never used with the J or N endings:

  • Kvin kaj sep faras dek du. - Five plus seven equals twelve.
  • Tridek kaj kvardek kvin faras sepdek kvin. - Thirty plus forty-five equals seventy-five.
  • Ilia nombro estas kvardek tri mil sepcent tridek. - Their number is forty-three thousand seven hundred and thirty.
  • Divido per nul ne estas permesita. - Dividing by zero is not permitted.
  • Tri estas duono de ses. - Three is half six.
  • Sep estas sankta nombro. - Seven is a sacred number.
  • Mi legis numeron 2 de la jaro 1990. - I read number 2 from the year 1990.

    Referring to the number of a magazine.

  • Ni loĝas en ĉambro tricent tridek tri en tiu hotelo. - We are staying in room three hundred and thirty-three in this hotel.

When referring to a number, an ordinal numeral can also be used: la dua numero, la jaro 1990-a, la tricent-tridek-tria ĉambro. But there can be a difference between a number in an order and normal number. For example, kvara (fourth) means that the thing is preceded by three other things, while numero kvar (number four) means that the thing has the number 4 as a sort of "name". In hotels, for example, there are often missing numbers, so that room 100 is not necessarily the hundredth room. And when standing at the end of a street, one may say that house number one is not the first house, but the last.

Special uses of unu

The basic meaning of unu is numerical. This use has already been explained above together with the other numerals. But unu also has some special meanings and uses. Unu can express, among other things, sameness, uniqueness, individuality, and identity:

  • La loĝantoj de unu regno estas samregnanoj, la loĝantoj de unu urbo estas samurbanoj, la konfesantoj de unu religio estas samreligianoj. = La loĝantoj de unu sama regno... - The inhabitants of one nation are conationals, the inhabitans of one city are fellow urbanites, the people who share one religion are corelgionists.= The inhabitans of one and the same nation...
  • Ŝin trafis unu malfeliĉo post la alia. - She was hit by one misfortune after another.

    Here unu stresses the distinctiveness of each misfortune. In this sense unu is often combined with alia.

  • En unu tago, kiam ŝi estis apud tiu fonto, venis al ŝi malriĉa virino. - One day, when she was by this well, a poor woman came to her.

    This refers to a day known to the speaker, but not to the listener. In this use unu is a partially defining article.

Unu is also used individually without a noun to follow it. You might say that the noun is understood through context, but in some cases the addition of the noun would be bothersome. In those cases, unu is used as if it were a pronoun"

  • Ŝi estis unu el la plej belaj knabinoj, kiujn oni povis trovi. - She was one of the most beautiful girls, which one could find
  • Unu babilis, alia kantis. - One spoke, another sang.

When an unu is used to mark an individual, or used like a pronoun (or sometimes to show uniqueness), in the description of several individuals, it receives the J ending:

  • El ŝiaj multaj infanoj unuj estas bonaj kaj aliaj estas malbonaj. - Of her many children some are good and others are bad.
  • Dum unuj artikoloj alportas al nia afero rondon da novaj amikoj, multaj aliaj, skribitaj nelerte, tute perdiĝas sen rezultato. - While some articles bring to our enterprise a new circle of friends, many others, badly written, go to waste without any result.
  • Unuj [studentoj] kun gaja rideto sur la buŝo, aliaj meditante, aliaj en vigla interparolado, unuope aŭ duope forlasas la universitatan korton. - Some [students] with a happy smile on their lips, others meditating, others in lively conversation, leave the university grounds individually or in twos.

The form unu can't receive the N ending. This is a basic rule that is always valid, whether unu shows number, individuality, or uniqueness: Unu mi renkontis en Londono, alian en Parizo. Never use the form unun. But the form unuj can receive the N-ending, because unuj can never be a pure numeral. It always shows individuality or uniqueness. The form unujn, however, is only very seldom needed: Unujn mi renkontis en Londono, aliajn en Parizo.

The rule that forbids the use of unun but permits unujn is strange from the viewpoint of logic. But it makes sense in view of practical use. In practice, the uses of unu to show number, uniqueness, and individuality are not clearly distinct from one another. There are many cases on the line, and for this reason, the simple rule that unu should never have an N-ending is very practical. It isn't necessary to decide in each and every case whether unu shows number, uniqueness, or individuality. Unuj is, however, only used to show individuality or uniqueness, and therefore there is no problem with using the N-ending with it, if its role in the sentence requires that.

Don't confuse the use of unu to show individuality with the table word iu (some, someone). Unu showing individuality indicates that the speaker knows well which individual he is referring to (though the listener likely does not know). Iu shows that the identity of the individual being discussed is unknown or unclear, or that the identity isn't important.

  • Loĝas ĉi tie unu el viaj amikoj. - One of your friends live here.

    The speaker knows which one of the friends live here.

  • Loĝas ĉi tie iu el viaj amikoj. - One of your friends live here.

    The speaker doesn't(probably)know which one of the friends live here.

Iu (some) can often be used instead of unu (one) when it isn't important to show whether an individual is known to the speaker. But unu is more precise. It shows that the speaker already knows the identity.

The adjective certa (certain) sometimes has a meaning similar to the use of unu (one) to show an individual, but certa is stronger. It emphatically shows that something is certainly known to the speaker (but probably not to the listener): certaj okazoj multe da saĝo estas pli malbona, ol se oni ĝin tute ne havus. Hieraŭ vizitis min certa sinjorino Schmidt.

The abundance of uses for unu (one) seems strange to some, especially because textbooks rarely explain it. For that reason, many prefer to use unu in a purely numerical role, preferring use of iu(j) (some), kelka(j) (some, a few), and certa(j) (certain) for other uses. This usage diminishes the richness of the language, because all of these words express different nuances, and all of these nuances are needed.

Unu... la alia

Pronomial use of unu is part of the expression unu... (la) alia (one another), which shows reciprocity. Unu... (la) alia represents an entire abbreviated sentence. Unu normally is the subject in a complete sentence, and (la) alia is an object or has another role other than that of the subject:

  • Tiuj gejunuloj amas unu la alian.Tiuj gejunuloj amas. Unu amas la alian. - All youngsters love each other. → All youngsters love. One loves the other.

    Each one of them loves each other one of them.

  • Ili donis florojn unu al alia.Ili donis florojn. Unu donis florojn al alia. - They gave each other flowers. → They gave flowers. One gave flowers to the other.

    Each of them gave flowers to the others.

  • Li kunigis kvin tapiŝojn unu kun la alia. - He bound five carpets one to the other. [Exodus 36:10]

    He put together one carpet with the other.

The expression unu... (la) alia (one another) may almost always be used without J-endings. When necessary, a J-ending can be added to alia (other) and also to La junaj knabinoj kaj junuloj ĉe la lageto babilas unuj kun la aliaj.unuLa registaroj ĵetas la homojn unujn kontraŭ la aliajn. = La registaroj ĵetas unujn homojn kontraŭ la aliajn homojn. (one) depending on the intended meaning: La junaj knabinoj kaj junuloj ĉe la lageto babilas unuj kun la aliaj. Some of them speak with others of them. Sometimes the form unujn must be used: La registaroj ĵetas la homojn unujn kontraŭ la aliajn. = La registaroj ĵetas unujn homojn kontraŭ la aliajn homojn.

Instead of unu... la alia (one another), the word reciproke (reciprocally) can sometimes be used together with si or another pronoun: La knabino kaj la knabo kisis sin reciproke. = La knabino kaj la knabo kisis unu la alian. Reciproke can also be used together with unu... la alia to emphasize the reciprocity: Vi ne estas reciproke egalaj unu al la alia en la regiono de la spirito. The word inter can also be used like a prefix with a verb, often with si or another pronoun, or the expression inter si (between/among themselves) (inter ni (among us), inter vi (among you)), which always means unu kun la alia (with one another) or similarly: Ili sin interakuzas. = Ili akuzas unu la alian. Ili interparolas. = Ili parolas unu kun la alia. Ili estis tre amikaj inter si. The pronoun si should never be used together with unu... la alia. Don't say: Ili amas sin unu la alian. Say simply: Ili amas unu la alian.

Substantival (noun type) number words

Number words with the suffix ON show fractional numbers:

  • duono = 1/2
  • triono = 1/3
  • dekono = 1/10
  • dekduono = 1/12
  • centono = 1/100
  • milono = 1/1000

Numbers higher than 999999 are expressed using substantival number words; that is, numbers in the form of a noun.

miliono
1.000.000 (six zeros)
miliardo
1.000.000.000 (= nine zeros)
biliono
1.000.000.000.000 (= twelve zeros)
triliono
1.000.000.000.000.000.000 (= eighteen zeros)

Some languages, for example English and Russian, give different meanings than Esperanto does to the number words biliono (billion) and triliono (trillion). The Esperanto words should only have the meanings shown above, and no others. There are also higher numbers that are words of this type, but they are very seldom used.

Substantival number words receive the J- and N-endings according to the same rules as other nouns:

  • Kiam vi havos rikolton, vi donos kvinonon al Faraono. - When you have the harvest, you will give the Pharaoh one fifth.
  • Mi ricevis dudek kvin centonojn. - I received twenty-five hundred.
  • Ŝi havas pli ol dek milionojn. - She has more than ten million.
  • La malprofito atingis sumon de kvardek sep miliardoj. - The loss came to the sum of forty-seven billion. [American billion, not British]

Number words in noun form can't directly describe a noun; they are used together with the preposition da:

  • Li havas du miliardojn da dolaroj. - He has two billion dollars.
  • Ŝi vidis pli ol dek milionojn da homoj. - She saw more than ten million people.

An ON-word with an O-ending also requires the help of a preposition: Unu tago estas tricent-sesdek-kvinonotricent-sesdek-sesono de jaro.

Numerals can also become nouns through the addition of an O-ending. In this form, they show a thing with a relationto a number, or a group with that many items. Numbers are always written together before an O-ending. For clarity, a dividing hyphen can be used where there would ordinarily be spaces:

  • unuunuo = the digit 1, basic element of calculation, basic amound,(ie. meter, kilogram, ampere etc.)
  • duduo = the digit 2, pair, couple
  • dek dudek-duodekduo = the number 12, group of 12 things
  • du mil kvincentdu-mil-kvincento (preferably not dumilkvincento)
  • Mi aĉetis dekon da ovoj kaj dek-duon da pomoj. - I bought a ten of eggs and a dozen apples.

Mixed numbers

When numerals are mixed with number words in noun form to make a number, their differing rules collide. Numerals want to be epithets of the primary word, while noun-type number words are themselves primary words followed by a da expression. Generally, the correct solution is to use da in these cases, because though da used together with numerals is rare, it is in no way wrong.

  • Tie loĝas 1.500.000 homoj. = Tie loĝas unu miliono (kaj) kvincent mil da homoj. - 1,500,000 people live there. =One million five hundred thousand people are housed there.

    One could also say: …unu kaj duona milionoj da homoj (one and a half million people). Or: …unu komo kvin milionoj da homoj (one point five million people).

  • Mi havas unu milionon da eŭroj. Se mi ricevos ankoraŭ unu eŭron, mi havos unu milionon unu da eŭroj. - I have a million euros. If I receive another one euro, I'll have a million and one euros.
  • Li havas 10.300.978 $. = Li havas dek milionojn tricent mil naŭcent sepdek ok da dolaroj. - He has $10,300,978 = He has ten million three hundred thousand nine hundred and seventy-eight dollars.
  • Ili kostas kvar kaj duonon da dolaroj. - They cost four and a half dollars.

    Another common and good solution is: Ili kostas kvar kaj duonan dolarojn (They cost four and a half dollars).

Adjectival number words

If the A ending is added to a numeral, an adjective is created, showing the number's position in an order, or an ordinal numeral:

  • unua = in first position in a lineup
  • dua = in the second position in an order (having one before it)
  • tria = in position number three (having two in front of it)
  • kvara = in position four in a lineup (having three before it)
  • deka = in the tenth position in order (having nine before it)

Ordinal numerals receive a J-ending and an N-ending just as ordinary adjectives do:

  • La sepan tagon de la semajno Dio elektis, ke ĝi estu pli sankta, ol la ses unuaj tagoj. - God chose the seventh day to be holier than the first six days.

If an A-ending is added to a number with several words, the entire expression can be combined into one word, but the words can also be left separate. In any case, the A-ending is always placed only at the end. If a combined form is used, hyphens can be used to divide the components of the words for clarity. The hyphens should be placed where there are spaces in the original multi-word number:

  • Hodiaŭ estas la dudek sepa (tago) de Marto. = ...dudek-sepa... - Today it is the twenty-seventh (day) of March = ...twenty-seventh...

    (or ...twenty-seventh...)

  • Georgo Vaŝington estis naskita la dudek duan de Februaro de la jaro mil sepcent tridek dua. = ...dudek-duan... mil-sepcent-tridek-dua. - George Washington was born on the twenty-second of February in the year 1732.

    Instead of dudek-duan you can also write dudekduan, but instead of mil-sepcent-tridek-dua don't write milsepcenttridekdua, because that would be too unclear.

  • Tio okazis en la okdekaj jaroj. = ...iam en la jaroj de 1980 ĝis 1989 inkluzive. - This happened in the eighties. = ...sometime in the years from 1980 to 1989 inclusive.
  • Ŝi estas la dua plej bona en nia klaso, kaj mi estas la tria. - She is the second best in our class, and I'm the third.

    Just one is better than us.

When an ordinal expression is used alongside an ordinary numeral, the ordinal expression should come first for clarity:

  • Tio okazis iam en la unuaj dek tagoj. - That happened sometime in the first ten days.

    If one were to say la dek unuaj tagoj there is the danger that one might take dek to be part of the ordinal expression, in other words as if to say la dek-unuaj tagoj.

Other number words with the A-ending

ON-words with an A-ending are ordinary adjectives.

  • duona = having only half of its full height
  • triona = having only a third of its full size
  • centona = having only one hundredth of its full size.
  • Ĝi estas longa je duona metro. - It is half a meter in length.

    Its length is 50 centimeters.

  • Kvaronan horon li restis. - They stayed for a quarter of an hour.

    He remained fifteen minutes.

Miliona (millionth), miliarda (billionth), etc. are ordinary adjectives, with may theoretically have various meanings according to context. But in practice, they are used almost exclusively to show order in a sequence: Nia miliona kliento ricevos specialan donacon.

The word nula is an ordinary adjective that theoretically may be used with various meanings, according to context, including with an ordinal meaning (nula = zeroth): je la nula horo kaj tridek minutoj. In practice, it is almost only used with the meaning "non-existent, worthless, invalid": Bruo potenca, nula esenco.

Ordinal adjectives from mixed numbers are theoretically possible, but hardly recommended: nia du-milion-unua kliento. Expressions with a numeral should be used instead: nia kliento numero du milionoj unu.

Adverbial number words

Number words with an E-ending have the same meanings as th corresponding adjective forms:

  • unue = in the first position
  • due = in the second position.
  • dek-due, dek due = in the 12th position
  • Unue mi redonas al vi la monon, kiun vi pruntis al mi; due mi dankas vin por la prunto; trie mi petas vin ankaŭ poste prunti al mi, kiam mi bezonos monon. - In the first place I'm giving back the money which you lent me; secondly I thank you for the loan; thirdly I ask that you will also lend me money later when I need it.
  • Ĝi estas trione el plasto, trione el ligno kaj trione el metalo. - It is one third plastic, one third wood and one third metal.
  • Tiu monto estas eĉ ne centone tiel alta kiel Ĉomolungmo. = La alteco de tiu monto estas eĉ ne unu centono de la alteco de Ĉomolungmo (= Everesto). - This mountain is not even one hundredth as high as Chomolungma. = The height of this mountain is not one hundredth that of Chomolungma (=Mount Everest).

Nuanced use of number words

The prepositions ĝis, inter and po can be used with number words to add nuance in various manners:

  • Restas ĉirkaŭ dek personoj. = Restas proksimume dek personoj. - About ten people remain. = There are approximately ten people left.
  • Ĝis ducent homoj povas eniri. = Maksimume ducent homoj povas eniri. - Up to two hundred people can enter. = A maximum of two hundred people can enter.
  • Ili kostas de kvin ĝis dek eŭrojn. = Ili kostas minimume kvin kaj maksimume dek eŭrojn. - They cost from five to ten euros. = They cost at least five and at most ten euros.
  • Mi vidis inter cent kaj ducent homojn. = Mi vidis minimume cent kaj maksimume ducent homojn. - I saw between one hundred and two hundred people. = I saw at least one hundred and at most two hundred people.
  • Aranĝu ilin en du vicoj, po ses en vico. = Aranĝu ilin en du vicoj, ses en ĉiu vico. - Arrange them in two rows, six to a row. = Arrange them into two rows, with six in each row.

In these sentences, the prepositions don't concern the noun that follows at all; they have meaning only for the number. If the number word is removed, the nuance marker must also disappear, because it no longer makes sense.

  • Restas ĉirkaŭ dek personoj.Restas personoj. - About ten people remain. → People are remaining

    (Restas ĉirkaŭ personoj has no meaning.)

  • Mi vidis inter cent kaj ducent homojn.Mi vidis homojn. - I saw between a hundred and two hundred people. → I saw people.

    (Mi vidis inter homojn does no make sense.)

These prepositions don't mark a role in a sentence when they add nuance to numbers. They are not role markers, but they have an adverbial sort of role: ĉirkaŭ = proksimume; de = minimume; ĝis = maksimume.

Words used to add nuance to number words can be used together with true role markers, which show the role of the whole expression in the sentence:

  • Ĝi estis virino, kiu povis havi la aĝon de ĉirkaŭ sesdek jaroj. - It was a woman, who might have been about sixty years old.

    Ĉirkaŭ concerns only the number sesdek. De shows the role indicator of the whole expression ĉirkaŭ sesdek jaroj.

  • Nenie en la ĉirkaŭ cent jaroj la loko estis pli ŝanĝita, ol en unu malgranda frukta ĝardeno. - Nowhere in a hundred years or so, has the place changed as much as in one small fruit garden.

    The circumstantial complement of time has the preposition en. Ĉirkaŭ only gives a nuance to the number cent.

  • Ili loĝos tie de ok ĝis naŭ jarojn. - They will live there for eight to nine years.

    The phrase is a circumstantial complement of duration which must have a role indicator. Here it has the N-ending. De kaj ĝis only refines the numbers.

  • Estis tiel malvarme, ke ili devis kuŝi sub po tri kovriloj. - It was so cold that they had to sleep under three blankets each.

    The phrase sub po tri kovriloj is a circumstantial complement of location introduced by sub. Po only gives a nuance to tri.

  • Li havas ĉirkaŭ mil eŭrojn. - he has about a thousand euros.

    The object ĉirkaŭ mil eŭrojn requires the N-ending.Ĉirkaŭ only gives a nuanced meaning to the number mil.

In these sentences, these particles are only used to add nuance, and are not used as prepositions — with the exception of po (at a rate of). The language's use of po varies. Some use po always as a true preposition, which means that they never use an N-ending together with po, even if that part of the sentence takes the role of an object in the sentence; for example, in Mi donis al ili po dek eŭroj. Other use po only adverbially, and add an N-ending when its role in a sentence requires that, like in Mi donis al ili po dek eŭrojn.. Both uses are considered correct and appropriate for use.

Mathematical expressions

Formula Pronunciation
2 + 2 = 4 Du kaj du faras kvar. / Du plus du estas kvar.
10 – 3 = 7 Dek minus tri faras sep.
22 × 6 = 132 Dudek du multiplikite per ses faras cent tridek du. / Dudekduoble ses estas cent tridek du. / Dudek du oble ses egalas al cent tridek du.
7:2 = 3,5 Sep dividite per du faras tri komo kvin.
46,987 kvardek ses komo naŭ ok sep (no ...komo naŭcent okdek sep)
10² = 100 La dua potenco de dek estas cent. / Dek kvadrate estas cent.
5³ = 125 La tria potenco de kvin estas cent dudek kvin. / Kvin kube estas cent dudek kvin.
  • Kvin kaj sep faras dek du. - Five plus seven equals twelve.
  • Dek kaj dek faras dudek. - Ten plus ten equals twenty.
  • Kvar kaj dek ok faras dudek du. - Four plus eighteen equals twenty-two.
  • Tridek kaj kvardek kvin faras sepdek kvin. - Thirty (30) and forty five (45) make seventy five (75).
  • Kvinoble sep estas tridek kvin. - Five times seven equals thirty five.

An equal sign (=) can be pronounced as faras (makes) or estas (is) or egalas (al) (equals [to]), more or less according to the preference of the speaker: du kaj du faras kvar, dek minus tri estas sep, du oble du egalas (al) kvar.

Don't use a period (full stop) instead of a comma with decimals. A period is used as a decimal sign in a few countries. But Esperanto, like most countries and languages, uses a comma to mark decimals.

Formula Pronunciation
9403,5 km naŭ mil kvarcent tri komo kvin kilometroj / naŭ mil kvarcent tri kaj duona kilometroj
8,6 kg ok komo ses kilogramoj / ok kilogramoj (kaj) sescent gramoj
+37,7° (plus) tridek sep komo sep gradoj / tridek sep komo sep gradoj super nulo
49,75 USD kvardek naŭ komo sep kvin (Usonaj) dolaroj / kvardek naŭ (Usonaj) dolaroj (kaj) sepdek kvin cendoj

Words for sub-units like grams and cents can sometimes be understood through context in expressions like these: tri kilogramoj (kaj) sepcent, kvar dolaroj (kaj) sepdek kvin. The speaker should be careful to ensure that there is no doubt as to the sub-unit being referenced.

Hours and time

To show the hour, one of the following models should be used. The words horo (hour) and minutoj (minutes) are very frequently left out and understood only through context.

In numbers Saying the numbers
3:15 (aŭ 15:15) Estas la tria (horo) (kaj) dek kvin (minutoj). / Estas dek kvin (minutoj) post la tria (horo).
9:45 (aŭ 21:45) Estas la naŭa (horo) (kaj) kvardek kvin (minutoj). / Estas dek kvin (minutoj) antaŭ la deka (horo).

To add more clarity, the expressions en la antaŭtagmezo or antaŭtagmeze (in the morning), and en la posttagmezo or posttagmeze (in the afternoon) may be added. But the 24-hour system may also be used:

  • Estas la dek-kvina (kaj) dek kvin. / Estas dek kvin post la dek-kvina. - It is now fifteen-fifteen. It is fifteen minutes after fifteen hundred hours. (a quarter past three PM)
  • Estas la dudek-unua (kaj) kvardek kvin. / Estas dek kvin antaŭ la dudek-dua. - It is 21:45 / It is 9:45 p.m.

Instead of 15 minutoj (15 minutes), kvarono (a quarter), kvaronhoro (a quarter hour) or kvarona horo (quarter hour) may be used. Instead of 30 minutoj (30 minutes), duono (a half), duonhoro (a half hour), or duona horo (a half hour) are often used.

One speaks of the hour using ordinal numbers: tria (third), naŭa (ninth), dek-dua (twelfth), etc. To ask about the time, one therefore uses the question word kiom (how much) + A-finaĵo → (+ final letter A) kioma (how many-eth).

  • kiom? - How much? How many?tri, naŭ, dek du, dudek unu...
  • kioma? - How many-eth?tria, naŭa, dek-dua, dudek-unua...

  • Kioma horo estas, gardisto? - What time is it, guard?
  • Kioma horo estis, kiam vi alvenis? - What time was it when you arrived?

To show when something happens, a role marker must be used, normally je, antaŭ, post, ĝis or ĉirkaŭ:

  • Je (la) kioma horo okazis tio? - At the how-manyeth hour did that happen? At what time did that happen?
  • Tio okazis je la tria kaj kvardek. - That happened that the third and forty. That happened at three forty (3:40).
  • Ni devas manĝi antaŭ la oka. - We must eat before eight.
  • Post la dek-unua horo ĉio devas esti preta. - After the eleventh hour, everything has to be ready. After eleven, everything has to be ready.

When referring to hours, the role marker N should ordinarily not be used, because there is a risk of confusing the hour with the date, since it is also shown with ordinal numerals: je la tria = "je la tria horo", la trian = "en la tria tago de la monato".

Dates

The following models should be used to show a date. The words tago (day) and en la jaro (in the year) are very often omitted and understood only through context.

  • Estis la tria (tago) de Decembro (en la jaro) mil naŭcent naŭdek unu. - It was the third (day) of December (of the year) nineteen ninety-one.
  • Hodiaŭ estas la dua (tago) de Majo (en la jaro) du mil kvin. - Today is the sencond (day) of May (of the year) two thousand and five.
  • Morgaŭ estos la dudek kvina (tago) de Julio (en la jaro) du mil dek. - Tomorrow it will be the twenty-fifth (day) of July (of the year) two thousand and ten.

Ordinal numerals can also be used for years, but this usage is becoming more and more uncommon: Estis la lasta de Januaro (en la jaro) mil-okcent-okdek-sepa.

Between the day and the month, de (of) should always be used, because the ordinal number doesn't relate to the month, but to the word tago (day), which is normally left out: la unua de Majo = la unua tago de Majo, la dek-tria de Decembro = la dek-tria tago de Decembro. If the expression la unua Majo (the first of May) were used, it would be referring to the first of several months of May.

To show the date when something happened, is happening, or will happen, a suitable role marker should be used. The N ending is often used for this purpose:

  • Ili venos la sepan (tagon) de Marto. = Ili venos en la sepa (tago) de Marto. - They will come the seventh of March.= They will come on the seventh day of March.
  • La unuan de Majo ili komencis sian vojaĝon. = En la unua (tago) de Majo... - On the first of May they started their trip. =On the first (day)of May...
  • Mi laboris tie ĝis la unua de Aŭgusto mil naŭcent sesdek. - I worked there until the first of August nineteen sixty.

  • Antaŭ la lasta tago de Junio vi devas trovi laboron. - Before the last day of June you have to find work.
  • Post la dek kvina de Marto ŝi loĝos ĉe mi. - After the fifteenth of March she will live with me.
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