60 in Greek

60
Numeral
60
Cardinal
εξήντα (exī́nta)
Ordinal
εξηκοστός (exīkostós) - m εξηκοστή (exīkostī́) - f εξηκοστό (exīkostó) - n

Nearby Greek Numbers

60 in Other Languages

About 60 in Greek

In Greek, 60 is written and spoken as εξήντα (exī́nta). The ordinal form — used for rankings, dates, and sequences — is εξηκοστός (exīkostós) - m εξηκοστή (exīkostī́) - f εξηκοστό (exīkostó) - n.

The number 60 is even. 60 comes up regularly in Greek conversations — in stores, when giving your phone number, reading addresses, or discussing dates and ages.

Numbers such as 60 are foundational to Greek fluency. Once you can confidently hear and produce numbers in real conversations, a huge range of everyday interactions become accessible.

Learning Numbers in Greek

What makes Greek numbers challenging

Greek numbers have three genders (masculine, feminine, neuter) that affect the forms of 1, 3, and 4 depending on the noun being counted. The accentuation pattern of Greek number words is important — stress falls on specific syllables and shifting it changes the meaning. Confusing éna (1) with ennéa (9) is a classic pitfall since they sound quite similar, especially over the phone. Greek also has a formal number system using letters of the alphabet, still seen on building floors and official documents.

Tips for learning Greek numbers

Learn the basic digit names with their accent patterns — stress matters in Greek. Practice distinguishing éna (1) from ennéa (9) in isolation and in context. For everyday use, the masculine forms of numbers work for most situations. Greek numbers are quite regular after the first few, so once you master 1-20 and the tens, the system clicks. Street numbers, bus routes, and prices are excellent real-world practice.