100 in Czech

100
Numeral
100
Cardinal
sto
Ordinal
stý

Nearby Czech Numbers

100 in Other Languages

About 100 in Czech

To say 100 in Czech, you use sto. The ordinal form — used for rankings, dates, and sequences — is stý.

In mathematics, 100 is even. 100 comes up regularly in Czech conversations — in stores, when giving your phone number, reading addresses, or discussing dates and ages.

Building fluency with numbers like 100 in Czech pays dividends quickly. Numbers are among the first things you use in a new language — for shopping, directions, introductions, and understanding announcements.

Learning Numbers in Czech

What makes Czech numbers challenging

Czech numbers are grammatically complex: they decline through seven cases, have gendered forms, and change the noun they modify in different ways depending on the number. Phone numbers are read as three-digit groups spoken as compound numbers (e.g., 608 = "šest set osm"), requiring you to understand hundreds at conversational speed. The consonant clusters (čtyři, tři) are difficult for non-Slavic speakers to distinguish.

Tips for learning Czech numbers

For everyday situations, focus on understanding numbers as they are spoken rather than producing grammatically perfect forms. Practice hearing three-digit numbers (100-999) since Czech phone numbers are grouped this way. Learn the sounds of čtyři (4) and tři (3) as distinct patterns. Start with digit-by-digit recognition, then graduate to the three-digit group style that native speakers use.