French Numbers from 1 to 100 – Focus on 70, 80, and 90

Goal: Understand the logic behind French numbers above 69 — and why they feel like math puzzles!

Are you just starting out? Learn numbers 1–69 first with our beginner article → French Numbers from 1 to 69


Numbers 1–69: Review

From 1 to 69, French numbers are regular and logical.
You just combine blocks like:

  • 20 = vingt
  • 30 = trente
  • 40 = quarante
  • 50 = cinquante
  • 60 = soixante

Then you build:

  • 21 = vingt-et-un
  • 48 = quarante-huit
  • 66 = soixante-six

Nothing too strange here.


Numbers 70, 80, and 90: Welcome to Math Class

French doesn’t have simple new words for “seventy”, “eighty” or “ninety”.

Instead, French does math.

NumberFrench logicWord
7060 + 10soixante-dix
804 × 20quatre-vingts
90(4 × 20) + 10quatre-vingt-dix

Weird but True: 70 = soixante-dix

There’s no separate word for 70.
Instead, French says:
70 = 60 + 10 → soixante (60) + dix (10) = soixante-dix

And then:

  • 71 = soixante-et-onze
  • 72 = soixante-douze
  • 73 = soixante-treize
  • 79 = soixante-dix-neuf

🧠 Only 71 has “et” → just like 21, 31, 41…


80 = quatre-vingts (“four twenties”)

Instead of inventing a word for 80, French reuses twenty (vingt):

4 × 20 = 80quatre-vingts

Then:

  • 81 = quatre-vingt-un
  • 82 = quatre-vingt-deux
  • 89 = quatre-vingt-neuf

🧠 Details to note:

  • No “et” in 81
  • The “s” in quatre-vingts disappears when another number follows
  • 80 = quatre-vingts
  • 81 = quatre-vingt-un ❌ (no “s”)

90 = quatre-vingt-dix (“four twenties and ten”)

Now it gets spicy. 😅

90 = (4 × 20) + 10 → quatre-vingt-dix

And more:

  • 91 = quatre-vingt-onze
  • 92 = quatre-vingt-douze
  • 99 = quatre-vingt-dix-neuf

It’s really a combination of math + memory but it follows a pattern.


🧪 Mini Practice – Translate These

How do you say these in French?

  1. 71 =
  2. 85 =
  3. 99 =
  4. 62 =
  5. 81 =
✅ Show answers

1. soixante-et-onze
2.quatre-vingt-cinq
3.quatre-vingt-dix-neuf
4.soixante-deux
5.quatre-vingt-un


🎯 Recap

Number rangeFrench logic
1–69Simple and linear
70–7960 + (10 → 19)
80–894 × 20 + (1 → 9)
90–994 × 20 + (10 → 19)

Why is French like this?

French used an old counting system called vigesimal (based on 20s).
That’s why you get “four twenties” instead of eighty.

🧠 Fun fact:

  • Belgium and Switzerland use easier forms like septante (70) and nonante (90)
  • But in France: it’s math time!



Shopping Cart
  • Your cart is empty.