Japan-Studies.com Contact us | Help
Sign up for PayPal and start accepting credit card payments instantly.

Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at /hsphere/local/home/runabout/japan-studies.com/language/grammar/constructions/counting.php:1) in /hsphere/local/home/runabout/japan-studies.com/forum/includes/sessions.php on line 206

Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at /hsphere/local/home/runabout/japan-studies.com/language/grammar/constructions/counting.php:1) in /hsphere/local/home/runabout/japan-studies.com/forum/includes/sessions.php on line 207
 
Counting & Classifiers
Email this page
Print this page

The Japanese counting system has been taken over from the Chinese. Where our counting system counts up to 1,000, the Japanese and Chinese system counts up to 10,000.

零/ゼロ/丸 rei / zero / maru 0   zero
一 (壱 弌 壹) ichi 1 one
二 (弐 貳 貮) ni 2 two
三 (参 參 弎) san 3 three
四 (肆) shi / yon 4 four
五 (伍) go 5 five
六 (陸) roku 6 six
七 (漆 柒) shichi / nana 7 seven
八 (捌) hachi 8 eight
九 (玖) kyuu / ku 9 nine
十 (拾) juu 10 ten
百 (佰 陌) hyaku 100   one hundred
千 (仟 阡) sen 1,000 one thousand
万 (萬 卍) man 10,000 ten thousand
oku 100,000,000 a hundred million
chou 1,000,000,000,000 a trillion
kei 10,000,000,000,000,000   ten quadrillion

Another difference is the way numbers are constructed. The basic rule is that the location of the digit is indicated like in "two thousand five hundred". When counting from 1 to 10 "shi" is used for 4 and "shichi" for 7, but when using numbers the preference is given to the readings "yon" for 4 and "nana" for 7.

 

24
二十四 (ni juu yon)

4,096
四千九十六 (yon sen kyuu juu roku)

 

Some combinations get contractions.

 

300
三百 (sanbyaku)

600
六百 (roppyaku)

800
八百 (happyaku)

3,000
三千 (sanzen)

8,000
八千 (hassen)

1,000,000,000,000
一兆 (icchou)

8,000,000,000,000
八兆 (hacchou)

10,000,000,000,000
十兆 (jucchou / jicchou)

 

一(ichi) is only placed before 万 (man), 億 (oku), 兆 (chou) and 京 (kei). 十 (juu), 百 (hyaku) and 千 (sen) are never preceded by 一 (ichi)

 

111,111,111
一億千百十一万千百十一(ichi oku sen hyaku juu ichi man sen hyaku juu ichi)

 

Unlucky numbers
4 and 9 are considered unlucky numbers in Japanese because of sound association. "Shi" (4) is associated with death (死, shi) and "ku" (9) is associated with suffering (苦, ku).

Telephone Numbers
Telephone numbers are often read with the following pronunciations:

  0 maru
1 hito
2 ni
3 san
4 yon
5 go
6 roku
7 nana
8 hachi
9 kyuu
- no

The fictional phone number 0312-54-9678 would then be read as:
"maru san hito ni no go yon no kyuu roku nana hachi".

Counting Time
When counting time elements several irregularities occur.

Age
For counting one's age you use the classifier 才 or 歳 (sai). Here too several contractions occur, but especially "20 years old" has an irregular reading.

  一歳 issai 1   one year old
二歳 ni sai 2 two years old
三歳 san sai 3 three years old
四歳 yon sai 4 four years old
五歳 go sai 5 five years old
六歳 roku sai 6 six years old
七歳 nana sai 7 seven years old
八歳 hassai 8 eight years old
九歳 kyuu sai 9 nine years old
十歳 jissai / jussai 10 ten years old
二十歳 hatachi 20 twenty years old
二十一歳 ni juu issai 21 twenty one years old
三十歳 san jissai / san jussai 30 thirty years old
 

Hours
Hours are counted with two different classifiers, depending on whether you are counting the duration of time, 時間 (jikan), or reading time, 時 (ji). Pay particular attention to numbers ending on 4, 7, and 9.

  1時 ichi ji 1 o'clock 1時間 ichi jikan 1 hour
  2時 ni ji 2 o'clock 2時間 ni jikan 2 hours
  3時 san ji 3 o'clock 3時間 san jikan 3 hours
  4時 yo ji 4 o'clock 4時間 yo jikan 4 hours
  5時 go ji 5 o'clock 5時間 go jikan 5 hours
  6時 roku ji 6 o'clock 6時間 roku jikan 6 hours
  7時 shichi ji 7 o'clock 7時間 nana jikan 7 hours 
  8時 hachi ji 8 o'clock 8時間 hachi jikan 8 hours
  9時 ku ji 9 o'clock 9時間 ku jikan 9 hours 
  10時 juu ji 10 o'clock 10時間 juu jikan 10 hours 
  11時 juu ichi ji 11 o'clock 11時間 juu ichi jikan 11 hours 
  12時 juu ni ji 12 o'clock 12時間 juu ni jikan 12 hours 
  13時 juu san ji 13 o'clock 13時間 juu san jikan 13 hours 
  14時 juu yo ji 14 o'clock 14時間 juu yo jikan 14 hours 
  15時 juu go ji 15 o'clock 15時間 juu go jikan 15 hours 
  16時 juu roku ji 16 o'clock 16時間 juu roku jikan 16 hours 
  17時 juu shichi ji 17 o'clock 17時間 juu nana jikan 17 hours 
  18時 juu hachi ji 18 o'clock 18時間 juu hachi jikan 18 hours 
  19時 juu ku ji 19 o'clock 19時間 juu ku jikan 19 hours 
  20時 ni juu ji 20 o'clock 20時間 ni juu jikan 20 hours 
  21時 ni juu ichi ji 21 o'clock 21時間 ni juu ichi jikan 21 hours 
  22時 ni juu ni ji 22 o'clock 22時間 ni juu ni jikan 22 hours 
  23時 ni juu san ji 23 o'clock 23時間 ni juu san jikan 23 hours 
  24時 ni juu yo ji 24 o'clock 24時間 ni juu yo jikan 24 hours 
 

Days
Days can be counted as days of the month, or the number of days. In particular 1 - 10, 14, 20, and 24 are irregular. Every number ending on 4 has the same irregularity as 14 and 24.

  1日 tsuitachi the 1st day 1日 ichi nichi 1 day
2日 futsuka the 2nd day 2日間 futsukakan 2 days
3日 mikka the 3rd day 3日間 mikkakan 3 days
4日 yokka the 4th day 4日間 yokkakan 4 days
5日 itsuka the 5th day 5日間 itsukakan 5 days
6日 muika the 6th day 6日間 muikakan 6 days
7日 nanoka the 7th day 7日間 nanokakan 7 days
8日 youka the 8th day 8日間 youkakan 8 days
9日 kokonoka the 9th day 9日間 kokonokakan 9 days
10日 tooka the 10th day 10日間 tookakan 10 days
11日 juu ichi nichi the 11th day 11日間 juu ichi nichikan 11 days
12日 juu ni nichi the 12th day 12日間 juu ni nichikan 12 days
13日 juu san nichi the 13th day 13日間 juu san nichikan 13 days
14日 juu yokka the 14th day 14日間 juu yokkakan 14 days
15日 juu go nichi the 15th day 15日間 juu go nichikan 15 days
16日 juu roku nichi the 16th day 16日間 juu roku nichikan 16 days
17日 juu shichi nichi the 17th day 17日間 juu shichi nichikan 17 days
18日 juu hachi nichi the 18th day 18日間 juu hachi nichikan 18 days
19日 juu ku nichi the 19th day 19日間 juu ni nichikan 19 days
20日 hatsuka the 20th day 20日間 hatsukakan 20 days
21日 ni juu ichi nichi the 21st day 21日間 ni juu ichi nichikan 21 days
22日 ni juu ni nichi the 22nd day 22日間 ni juu ni nichikan 22 days
23日 ni juu san nichi the 23rd day 23日間 ni juu san nichikan 23 days
24日 ni juu yokka the 24th day 24日間 ni juu yokkakan 24 days
25日 ni juu go nichi the 25th day 25日間 ni juu go nichikan 25 days
26日 ni juu roku nichi the 26th day 26日間 ni juu roku nichikan 26 days
27日 ni juu shichi nichi the 27th day 27日間 ni juu shichi nichikan 27 days
28日 ni juu hachi nichi the 28th day 28日間 ni juu hachi nichikan 28 days
29日 ni juu ku nichi the 29th day 29日間 ni juu ku nichikan 29 days
30日 san juu nichi the 30th day 30日間 san juu nichikan 30 days
31日 san juu ichi nichi the 31st day 31日間 san juu ichi nichikan 31 days
 

Months
Months are counted regular, but again the distinction is made between a number of months and the twelve months of the year. Note the difference between the reading of 月 (getsu / gatsu).

  1月 ichi gatsu January 1ヶ月 ikka getsu 1 month
2月 ni gatsu February 2ヶ月 ni ka getsu 2 months
3月 san gatsu March 3ヶ月 san ka getsu 3 months
4月 shi gatsu April 4ヶ月 yon ka getsu 4 months
5月 go gatsu May 5ヶ月 go ka getsu 5 months
6月 roku gatsu June 6ヶ月 rokka getsu 6 months
7月 shichi gatsu July 7ヶ月 nana ka getsu 7 months
8月 hachi gatsu August 8ヶ月 hachi ka getsu 8 months
9月 ku gatsu September 9ヶ月 kyuu ka getsu 9 months
10月 juu gatsu October 10ヶ月 jikka getsu 10 months
11月 juu ichi gatsu November 11ヶ月 juu ikka getsu 11 months
12月 juu ni gatsu December 12ヶ月 juu ni ka getsu 12 months
 

Years
Four digit years are always pronounced in full, and not as in English "eighteen sixty eight". When written in kanji you may encounter years without the identifiers. When written in this way, the zero is written as a circle (maru).

  99年 kyuu juu kyuu nen '99
一八六八年 sen happyaku roku juu hachi nen 1868
二〇才 hatachi 20 years old
 

NOTE: 年 (nen) can be used both for counting years and to describe a timespan in years. 年間 (nenkan) can only be used to describe a timespan.
In Japan both the Gregorian calendar and the Japanese calendar are used. In the Japanese calendar, years are started from count one at the rule of a new emperor. For more information click here.

Classifiers
When counting anything you will need classifiers. Classifiers identify the type of object you are counting. To give you an example, when you want to say "three cars" you can't simply say 三車(san kuruma), you will need the classifier for machinery 台 (dai): 三台の車 (san dai no kuruma) or 車三台 (kuruma san dai).

NOTE: You can place the number plus classifier before the counted object by using the particle の (no), if you place the number after the object being counted you don't use の (no).

Though the Japanese prefer to use the correct classifier, there are so many that even the Japanese don't know all of them. In these cases the Japanese reading for the numbers 1 - 10 is used, for higher numbers the normal Chinese reading you've seen above is used.

  一つ hitotsu 1   one
二つ futatsu 2 two
三つ mitsu 3 three
四つ yotsu 4 four
五つ itsutsu 5 five
六つ mutsu 6 six
七つ nanatsu 7 seven
八つ yatsu 8 eight
九つ kokonotsu 9 nine
too 10 ten
 

Classifier overview
Here you will find the most common classifiers and the type of object they are used for. Below these you will find the irregular combinations where they exist.

  Animate objects
  (tou) Used for large (farm) animals cows / deer / whales / statues etc.
  1頭 (ittou); 8頭 (hattou); 10頭 (jittou / juttou); 100頭 (hyattou)
  (nin) Used for people
  1人 (hitori); 2人 (futari); 4人 (yo nin); 14人 (juu yo nin) etc.
  (hiki) Used for small animals dogs / cats / etc.
  1匹 (ippiki); 3匹 (sambiki); 6匹 (roppiki); 8匹 (happiki); 10匹 (jippiki / juppiki)
  (mei) Used for people (honorific)
  (wa) Used for birds and rabbits chickens / hares / etc.
  Inanimate objects
  (ko) Used for small items dice / paperclips / etc.
  1個 (ikko); 6個 (rokko); 8個 (hakko); 10個 (jikko)
  (satsu) Used for volumes books / magazines / etc.
  1冊 (issatsu); 8冊 (hassatsu); 10冊 (jissatsu / jussatsu)
  (dai) Used for machinery cars / vending machines / etc.
  (hai) Used for drinks beer / coffee / etc.
  1杯 (ippai); 3杯 (sambai); 6杯 (roppai); 8杯 (happai); 10杯 (jippai / juppai)
  (haku) Used for overnight stays
  1泊 (ippaku); 3泊 (sampaku); 6泊 (roppaku); 8泊 (happaku); 10泊 (jippaku / juppaku)
  (hon) Used for long cylindrical objects pens / bottles / etc.
  1本 (ippon); 3本 (sambon); 6本 (roppon); 8本 (happon); 10本 (jippon / juppon)
  (mai) Used for thin sheets paper / record sleeves / etc.
 
Shop for Japanese Comics at YesAsia.com
About Japan-Studies.com - Advertising - Contact Us
© 2005-2006 Japan-Studies.com - Privacy Policy