1,000 in French

1.000
Numeral
1.000
Cardinal
mille
Ordinal
millième

1,000 in Other Languages

About 1,000 in French

The number 1,000 in French is mille. The ordinal form — used for rankings, dates, and sequences — is millième.

The number 1,000 is even. In French-speaking environments, 1,000 is the kind of number you'll hear and need to use regularly, from market prices to building floor numbers.

Knowing 1,000 in French is more useful than it might seem. Numbers are woven into nearly every type of conversation, and fluency with them makes everything from shopping to socializing dramatically easier.

Learning Numbers in French

What makes French numbers challenging

The base-20 system for 70-99 requires mental arithmetic while listening: quatre-vingt-douze is literally "four-twenty-twelve" (92). Phone numbers are always dictated in pairs, meaning you need instant comprehension of every two-digit number 00-99 — including the tricky 70-99 range. The pace of French phone number dictation is fast, with five pairs rattled off in a natural rhythm. Liaison (sound linking between words) can make number boundaries hard to detect.

Tips for learning French numbers

Master two-digit numbers 00-99 before anything else — French phone numbers demand it. Drill the 70-99 range especially: soixante-dix (70), quatre-vingts (80), quatre-vingt-dix (90). Practice listening to phone numbers dictated in pairs, starting slowly and increasing speed. French TV and radio ads often include phone numbers, making them excellent free practice material. If visiting Belgium or Switzerland, note the simpler septante/huitante/nonante system.