Chapter 1 – Script and Pronunciation
Unit 9 — Numerals
Overview
In Unit 8, you practised reading simple Nepali words and phrases.
In this unit, you will learn Nepali numerals.
Nepali uses its own number symbols.
For example:
१
ek
one
२
duī
two
३
tīn
three
You will learn each number in three ways:
- the English digit
- the Nepali digit
- the Nepali word with transliteration
For example:
| English digit | Nepali digit | Nepali | Transliteration |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | १ | एक | ek |
| 2 | २ | दुई | duī |
| 3 | ३ | तीन | tīn |
You will also learn how to count people, objects, and animals using classifiers.
In this unit, you will learn:
- Nepali numerals from ० to २०
- how to read Nepali number symbols
- how to use numbers with nouns
- how to use वटा (waṭā) for objects and animals
- how to use जना (janā) for people
- how to ask “how many?” using कति (kati)
You do not need to memorize all the numbers immediately.
The goal is to recognize the symbols, read the words, and use numbers in simple phrases.
1. Nepali Numerals
Nepali numerals are used in everyday life.
You may see them in:
- dates
- page numbers
- prices
- phone numbers
- bus numbers
- addresses
- clock times
For example:
१ = ek
२ = duī
३ = tīn
Simple Rule
Learn each number as a three-part unit:
Nepali digit + Nepali word + transliteration
Example:
५
पाँच
pā̃c
2. Numbers ०–२०
Read and listen to the table slowly.
First, look at the Nepali digit.
Then listen to the audio.
Then read the Nepali word.
Finally, read the transliteration aloud.
Table 1.9.1 – Nepali Numbers ०–२०
A quick‑reference table of Nepali cardinal numbers.
| English digit | Nepali digit | Nepali | Transliteration | Audio |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | ० | शून्य | śūnya |
|
| 1 | १ | एक | ek |
|
| 2 | २ | दुई | duī |
|
| 3 | ३ | तीन | tīn |
|
| 4 | ४ | चार | cār |
|
| 5 | ५ | पाँच | pā̃c |
|
| 6 | ६ | छ | cha |
|
| 7 | ७ | सात | sāt |
|
| 8 | ८ | आठ | āṭh |
|
| 9 | ९ | नौ | nau |
|
| 10 | १० | दश | daś |
|
| 11 | ११ | एघार | eghāra |
|
| 12 | १२ | बाह्र | bāhra |
|
| 13 | १३ | तेह्र | tehra |
|
| 14 | १४ | चौध | caudha |
|
| 15 | १५ | पन्ध्र | pandhra |
|
| 16 | १६ | सोह्र | sohra |
|
| 17 | १७ | सत्र | satra |
|
| 18 | १८ | अठार | aṭhāra |
|
| 19 | १९ | उन्नाइस | unnāis |
|
| 20 | २० | बीस | bīs |
|
Learner Tip
Some Nepali numbers have nasal sounds.
For example:
पाँच
pā̃c
five
Practise saying the nasal vowel gently.
3. Try It Now
Read the numbers aloud.
Numbers ०–१०
० — शून्य — śūnya
१ — एक — ek
२ — दुई — duī
३ — तीन — tīn
४ — चार — cār
५ — पाँच — pā̃c
६ — छ — cha
७ — सात — sāt
८ — आठ — āṭh
९ — नौ — nau
१० — दश — daś
Read slowly first.
Then read again more naturally.
You can use the audio recorder below to record yourself. Listen to your recording and check whether each number is clear.
4. Counting with Classifiers
Nepali often uses classifiers when counting nouns.
A classifier is a short counting word.
It comes between the number and the noun.
The basic pattern is:
[number] + [classifier] + [noun]
For example:
एक वटा किताब
ek waṭā kitāb
one book
दुई जना विद्यार्थी
duī janā widyārthī
two students
At the beginner level, focus on two common classifiers:
- वटा (waṭā)
- जना (janā)
5. General Classifier: वटा (waṭā)
वटा (waṭā) is a general classifier.
It is used for many countable things, such as:
- books
- pens
- notebooks
- chairs
- bags
- animals
The pattern is:
[number] + वटा (waṭā) + [noun]
Examples:
दुई वटा कलम
duī waṭā kalam
two pens
चार वटा कुर्सी
cār waṭā kursī
four chairs
Simple Rule
Use वटा (waṭā) when counting many objects and animals.
Table 1.9.2 - General classifier: वटा (waṭā)
| Numeral | Nepali phrase | Transliteration | Meaning |
|---|---|---|---|
| १ | एक वटा किताब | ek waṭā kitāb | one book |
| २ | दुई वटा कलम | duī waṭā kalam | two pens |
| ३ | तीन वटा कापी | tīn waṭā kāpī | three notebooks |
| ४ | चार वटा कुर्सी | cār waṭā kursī | four chairs |
| ५ | पाँच वटा कुकुर | pā̃c waṭā kukur | five dogs |
Notice: किताब, कलम, कापी, कुर्सी, कुकुर remain unchanged. Nepali does not require plural marking like -हरू in these cases.
Learner Tip
Notice that the noun does not need to change.
For example:
एक वटा किताब
ek waṭā kitāb
one book
दुई वटा किताब
duī waṭā kitāb
two books
The word किताब (kitāb) stays the same.
7. Human Classifier: जना (janā)
जना (janā) is used for counting people.
The pattern is:
[number] + जना (janā) + [person word]
Examples:
एक जना विद्यार्थी
ek janā widyārthī
one student
दुई जना शिक्षक
duī janā śikṣak
two teachers
तीन जना साथी
tīn janā sāthī
three friends
Simple Rule
Use जना (janā) when counting people.
Table 1.9.3 - Human classifier: जना (janā)
| Numeral | Nepali phrase | Transliteration | Meaning |
|---|---|---|---|
| १ | एक जना विद्यार्थी | ek janā widyārthī | one student |
| २ | दुई जना शिक्षक | duī janā śikṣak | two teachers |
| ३ | तीन जना साथी | tīn janā sāthī | three friends |
| ४ | चार जना कामदार | cār janā kāmdār | four workers |
| ५ | पाँच जना बच्चा | pā̃c janā baccā | five children |
Learner Tip
Use जना (janā) only for people.
For objects, use वटा (waṭā).
9. वटा (waṭā) or जना (janā)?
Use the chart below to help you choose.
Table 1.9.4 – Choosing the Correct Classifier
| What are you counting? | Use | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Object | वटा (waṭā) | दुई वटा किताब — duī waṭā kitāb |
| Animal | वटा (waṭā) | पाँच वटा कुकुर — pā̃c waṭā kukur |
| Person | जना (janā) | तीन जना साथी — tīn janā sāthī |
Simple Rule
Objects and animals: वटा (waṭā)
People: जना (janā)
10. Asking “How Many?”
In Nepali, कति (kati) means “how many?”
When asking about objects or animals, use:
कति वटा …?
kati waṭā …?
how many …?
When asking about people, use:
कति जना …?
kati janā …?
how many people …?
11. Questions with कति वटा (kati waṭā)
Use कति वटा (kati waṭā) when asking about objects or animals.
Table 1.9.5 – कति वटा …? (kati waṭā …?)
| Nepali | Transliteration | English | Audio |
|---|---|---|---|
| यहाँ कति वटा किताब छन्? | yahā̃ kati waṭā kitāb chan? | How many books are here? |
|
| → यहाँ दुई वटा किताब छन्। | yahā̃ duī waṭā kitāb chan. | There are two books here. | |
| कक्षामा कति वटा कुर्सी छन्? | kakṣāmā kati waṭā kursī chan? | How many chairs are in the classroom? | |
| → कक्षामा दश वटा कुर्सी छन्। | kakṣāmā daś waṭā kursī chan. | There are ten chairs in the classroom. |
Try It Now
Practise asking and answering:
यहाँ कति वटा किताब छन्?
yahā̃ kati waṭā kitāb chan?
यहाँ दुई वटा किताब छन्।
yahā̃ duī waṭā kitāb chan.
12. Questions with कति जना (kati janā)
Use कति जना (kati janā) when asking about people.
Table 1.9.6 – कति जना …? (kati janā …?)
| Nepali | Transliteration | English | Audio |
|---|---|---|---|
| कक्षामा कति जना विद्यार्थी छन्? | kakṣāmā kati janā widyārthī chan? | How many students are in the classroom? |
|
| → कक्षामा पाँच जना विद्यार्थी छन्। | kakṣāmā pā̃c janā widyārthī chan. | There are five students in the classroom. | |
| तपाईंको परिवारमा कति जना छन्? | tapāī̃ko pariwārmā kati janā chan? | How many people are in your family? | |
| → मेरो परिवारमा चार जना छन्। | mero pariwārmā cār janā chan. | There are four people in my family. |
Try It Now
Practise asking and answering:
तपाईंको परिवारमा कति जना छन्?
tapāī̃ko pariwārmā kati janā chan?
मेरो परिवारमा चार जना छन्।
mero pariwārmā cār janā chan.
Change the number to match your own family.
Check Your Understanding
Use the activity below to practise Nepali numbers and classifiers.
Review Questions
Answer the questions.
- How do you write the Nepali digit for 1?
- How do you write the Nepali digit for 5?
- How do you say 3 in Nepali?
- How do you say 10 in Nepali?
- What does वटा (waṭā) mean?
- What does जना (janā) mean?
- Which classifier do you use for books?
- Which classifier do you use for people?
- How do you say “two pens” in Nepali?
- How do you ask “How many books are here?” in Nepali?
- How do you ask “How many students are in the classroom?” in Nepali?
- What does मेरो परिवारमा चार जना छन्। mean?
Self Reflection
Key Takeaways
In this unit, you learned that:
- Nepali uses its own numeral symbols, such as १, २, and ३.
- Nepali numerals are used in everyday contexts such as dates, prices, page numbers, and times.
- Each numeral can be learned as a digit, a Nepali word, and a transliteration.
- १ is एक (ek).
- २ is दुई (duī).
- ५ is पाँच (pā̃c).
- Nepali often uses classifiers when counting nouns.
- वटा (waṭā) is used for objects and animals.
- जना (janā) is used for people.
- The basic pattern is [number] + [classifier] + [noun].
- कति (kati) means “how many?”
- कति वटा (kati waṭā) is used for objects and animals.
- कति जना (kati janā) is used for people.