Learn French numbers 1–1000 with a full chart, pronunciation support, translate practice, and guided lessons on hundreds and the move into one thousand.
Learning French numbers 1–1000 gives you a much broader and more realistic command of French number words. This range is useful for prices, addresses, years, larger quantities, page references, and many everyday numerals.
This page is the broadest beginner-to-intermediate range in the core series. It keeps the same Teach Numbers structure for consistency, but adds the pattern guidance needed to help you read and say larger French numbers accurately and with more confidence.
If you are searching for French Numbers 1-1000 pronunciation or the common misspelling pronunciation, this page is built for that too. The chart supports audio or audible practice through the clickable number tool, and the lesson text highlights the forms learners most often need to hear, repeat, and translate.
French Numbers 1-1000 chart review helps you recognize the forms quickly.
Pronunciation support helps you hear and repeat the numbers more confidently.
Translate practice helps connect Arabic numerals with the written French form.
Audio / audible chart use makes repetition easier and more memorable.
French Numbers 1–1000 Chart
Start with the chart below to see the full set of french numbers 1-1000. On Teach Numbers, this chart supports clickable listening practice, so it is a good place to work on recognition, translate review, and pronunciation.
Click any number to hear it spoken aloud.
Use the chart first for quick recognition, then come back to it for audio or audible repetition after you have read the lesson sections below.
Key French Numbers from 1 to 1000
This reference table highlights the forms and turning points that matter most on a french numbers 1-1000 page. It gives you a cleaner way to review the structure without losing sight of the larger chart.
Number
French
100
cent
101
cent un
200
deux cents
300
trois cents
400
quatre cents
500
cinq cents
600
six cents
700
sept cents
800
huit cents
900
neuf cents
999
neuf cent quatre-vingt-dix-neuf
1000
mille
Understanding French Numbers 1–1000
On a French Numbers 1–1000 page, the main goal is to see how the system scales. The lower numbers still matter, but now they work inside larger structures built around the hundreds and, finally, mille.
French remains fairly regular here, but the spelling patterns still require attention. Learners benefit from recognizing the main building blocks quickly: the hundreds, the 70 / 80 / 90 system, plural behavior in forms like cents, and mille.
Key forms and patterns to notice:
100 is cent, and the hundreds family continues regularly upward.
1000 is mille.
Plural s behavior in cents still matters in exact hundreds.
Longer forms such as neuf cent quatre-vingt-dix-neuf become easier once you hear them as smaller joined parts.
That pattern awareness is what makes a page like French Numbers 1-1000 more useful than a simple list. Once you stop treating each number as isolated, the larger system becomes much easier to remember.
French Numbers Pronunciation Tips
If your main goal is French Numbers 1-1000 pronunciation, focus first on the forms that learners most often hesitate over. Repeat them slowly, then return to the chart and say them again at a more natural speed.
Practice the full hundreds family in order up to 900.
Repeat forms with quatre-vingt inside larger numbers extra times.
Use audio review on long mixed numbers such as 683 or 947.
Say 999 and 1000 together to feel the transition into mille.
Examples of French Numbers 1–1000 in Sentences
Reading the numbers in short everyday sentences helps move them out of isolation and into real use. These examples keep the vocabulary simple so you can focus on the number words themselves.
Il y a six cents élèves dans l’école. — There are six hundred students in the school.
La facture est de neuf cents euros. — The bill is nine hundred euros.
Le document a sept cents pages. — The document has seven hundred pages.
Nous habitons dans l’immeuble mille. — We live in building number one thousand.
Le total était huit cent quarante-deux. — The total was eight hundred forty-two.
Practicing number words in real sentences makes pronunciation, recognition, and recall much stronger than memorizing a list by itself.
Try the French Number Translate Tool
Use the translate tool to type a numeral and see the French number word. This is one of the fastest ways to connect French Numbers 1-1000 with written forms, chart review, and pronunciation practice.
French Number Translate
Type a number to see it written as a French number word.
Example: 1234
How to Practice French Numbers 1–1000
Here are a few simple ways to review the lesson efficiently.
count by hundreds from 100 to 1000
practice the hundreds as one review family before adding mixed numbers
translate random three-digit numbers without writing them first
use the chart to spot every number ending in 5 or 9
listen to and repeat larger numbers in one smooth phrase
With regular review, these numbers become much easier to recognize in conversation, class exercises, beginner reading, and listening practice.
Why French Numbers 1–1000 Matter
The range from 1 to 1000 gives you a much more realistic command of French numbers. It prepares you for larger prices, dates, addresses, lesson content, and real-world numerals that appear constantly outside of the very first beginner stages.
Once you feel comfortable with this page, the next step is to expand into the next chart range and then apply the numbers in dates, time, prices, and quizzes. That sitewide learning flow is what helps the pages feel connected instead of isolated.
Continue Learning French Numbers
You can continue learning French numbers with these pages.