11 in Dutch

11
Numeral
11
Cardinal
elf
Ordinal
elfde

Nearby Dutch Numbers

11 in Other Languages

About 11 in Dutch

To say 11 in Dutch, you use elf. The ordinal form — used for rankings, dates, and sequences — is elfde.

The number 11 is odd — and also prime, meaning it has exactly two factors. 11 is a number worth knowing in Dutch — it appears in real-world contexts like ages, distances, prices, and time expressions.

Numbers such as 11 are foundational to Dutch fluency. Once you can confidently hear and produce numbers in real conversations, a huge range of everyday interactions become accessible.

Learning Numbers in Dutch

What makes Dutch numbers challenging

The ones-before-tens inversion is the core challenge: hearing "vierentachtig" you must recognize it as 84, not 48. Dutch phone numbers are dictated in pairs after the 06 prefix, so you hear four two-digit numbers in rapid succession, each with inverted digits. The compound words are long — achtenzeventig (78) is five syllables — and can blur together at conversational speed. The similar sounds of twee (2), drie (3), and vier (4) add difficulty in noisy settings.

Tips for learning Dutch numbers

Drill two-digit numbers (20-99) until recognition is automatic — this is the key to handling Dutch phone numbers. Practice writing down pairs as you hear them. Remember that the first number word you hear in a compound number is the ones digit. Use Dutch news or podcasts to get your ear attuned to the rhythm. Most Dutch people speak excellent English, so you can always ask them to switch if needed.