Learning to count in another language isn’t always easy. Counting in French up to 69 is not too complicated, but from 70 onwards you have to do some arithmetic.
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For example for 70 you have to to add 60 + 10 to get “soixante-dix”; for 80 you have to multiply 4×20 (“quatre-vingts”); and for 90 you have to multiply 4×20 and add 10 (“quatre-vingt-dix”!).
Fortunately, in other French-speaking countries you count in a more “logical” way: in Belgium you say “septante”, “quatre-vingt” and “nonante”; in Switzerland “septante”, “huitante” and “nonante”.
It is also true that the system adopted by the Romans was not that simple: for the 9 (Roman number: IX), for example, a subtraction had to be made. If you want to learn more, you will find more content at the A1 level French course. Register on Sillabi!