
Explore every language at Teach Numbers
Choose a language and start learning numbers with confidence
This page is your main menu for the Teach Numbers language library. Jump into Spanish, Korean, French, Italian, Portuguese, Russian, Japanese, Chinese, Latin, or Roman numerals, then use charts, quizzes, vocabulary pages, and practice tools to build real fluency step by step.
Numbers
Begin with the building blocks: cardinal numbers, ordinal numbers, counting patterns, and number charts that make each system easier to understand.
Practice
Move beyond memorization with interactive quizzes, counting tools, and examples that help you read, hear, and use numbers in context.
Real-world use
Use your new number skills for time, dates, quantities, prices, ages, and other everyday situations that matter in real communication.
Browse language sections
Each section below opens a dedicated Teach Numbers hub for that language or number system. Start with the language you need today, or work through several of them to compare patterns, pronunciation, and counting rules.
Spanish
One of the most practical starting points for learners. Explore number charts, counting practice, time expressions, dates, and everyday vocabulary. The Spanish section includes several structured subpages and interactive tools for progressive learning.
Korean
Korean is especially interesting because learners work with more than one number system in daily use. Use this section to practice counting, reading common forms, and recognizing how numbers appear in real-life contexts.
French
French number formation has memorable patterns that become much easier with charts and examples. Visit the French area for numbers, dates, time, and quiz-based review that reinforces the most important forms.
Italian
Italian learners can use this section to build a strong numbers foundation before moving into broader language study. It is a great option for travel preparation, classroom support, and pronunciation practice.
Portuguese
Portuguese numbers are useful across conversation, travel, money, dates, and schedules. The Teach Numbers Portuguese section helps learners move from simple counting into practical use.
Russian
Russian numbers give learners a practical way to practice recognition, pronunciation, and everyday communication. Work through charts, examples, and exercises to build comfort with both spoken and written forms.
Japanese
Japanese number learning connects counting with everyday situations like dates, times, prices, and counters. This section offers a focused starting point for learners who want practical, repeatable practice.
Chinese
Chinese number patterns are highly useful for real-world communication, especially when talking about money, dates, time, and quantities. This section helps learners practice quickly and systematically.
Latin
Latin offers a classic route into historical language study and number forms that still influence education, law, literature, and terminology today. Use this section for a clean introduction and review.
Roman Numerals
Roman numerals are a useful special topic for clocks, outlines, events, chapter numbering, and historical references. This area is ideal for learners who want quick recognition and conversion practice.
How to choose
- Pick the language you are actively studying.
- Start with the 1–20 or 1–100 range for fast wins.
- Use a quiz after each study session.
- Return to time and date pages once basic counting feels natural.
Good next step
After opening a language section, look for number charts, cardinal and ordinal lessons, then finish with counting and quiz pages to reinforce what you just learned.
Why use a language hub page?
A language hub page gives learners a simple, high-clarity entry point. Instead of searching for individual lessons one by one, visitors can choose a language, scan the available resources, and begin with the exact type of practice they need. This reduces friction for beginners and makes the Teach Numbers library easier to use as it grows.
For many learners, numbers are one of the first successful milestones in a new language. They show up constantly in time, dates, prices, addresses, ages, classrooms, and travel situations. A clear main menu helps turn that early interest into a habit: choose a language, practice a chart, try a quiz, then move into related vocabulary and sentence work.
This page is also useful for teachers, parents, and independent learners who want to compare languages side by side. You can quickly jump from Spanish to French, from Korean to Japanese, or from Latin to Roman numerals and notice how each system handles counting, structure, and common usage.
Suggested learning path
- Pick one language from the menu above.
- Learn the first number range.
- Review pronunciation and examples.
- Try a quiz or counting page.
- Return the next day for quick repetition.
Consistent short practice sessions often work better than occasional long study sessions. Use Teach Numbers as a repeatable daily resource.
What you can learn on Teach Numbers
Core number systems
Learn how each language forms and uses numbers, from the earliest counting ranges to larger values and patterns.
Time and dates
Practice common real-life uses of numbers through clocks, schedules, calendars, and date formats.
Quizzes and review
Strengthen recall through repetition and interactive practice that checks recognition and understanding.
Teach Numbers works well for independent study, classroom warmups, homeschool support, travel preparation, and anyone who wants a fast reference while learning a new writing system or pronunciation pattern. Because the site organizes content into clear topic areas, it becomes easier to revisit the same concepts until they feel natural. That makes this Languages page especially valuable as a bookmarkable launch point.
Ready to pick your language?
Choose a section above and begin with the first chart or overview page. A few minutes of focused practice can turn number learning into one of the easiest wins in your language journey.
Further reference: Omniglot numbers index.
