20 in Arabic
Nearby Arabic Numbers
20 in Other Languages
About 20 in Arabic
When speaking Arabic, 20 is expressed as عشرون (ʿishrūn).
20 divides evenly by two. You'll encounter 20 in Arabic in many practical contexts: shopping, transportation, appointments, and everyday small talk.
For anyone learning Arabic, numbers like 20 are essential early targets. They appear in tasks as common as buying a coffee, reading a menu, catching a bus, or asking someone their age.
Learning Numbers in Arabic
What makes Arabic numbers challenging
Arabic numbers present a unique visual challenge: while Arabic text reads right-to-left, numbers are written and read left-to-right — creating a constant mental direction switch. The Eastern Arabic numeral glyphs (٠١٢٣٤٥٦٧٨٩) look unfamiliar to Western eyes, even though they share common ancestry. Arabic also has dual forms for quantities of two, distinct from singular and plural, which affects counting. Pronunciation varies significantly between dialects — Egyptian, Gulf, and Levantine Arabic all say numbers somewhat differently.
Tips for learning Arabic numbers
Start by memorizing the Eastern Arabic numeral shapes — many are recognizable once you see the connection to Western digits (١ resembles 1, ٩ resembles 9). Practice reading numbers in both directions, as they appear left-to-right within right-to-left text. Focus on one dialect first (Egyptian Arabic is the most widely understood). Use price tags and phone numbers as real-world practice, since these combine visual recognition with spoken comprehension.