60 in Hebrew
Nearby Hebrew Numbers
60 in Other Languages
About 60 in Hebrew
60 translates to שִׁשִּׁים (shishim).
The number 60 is even. 60 comes up regularly in Hebrew conversations — in stores, when giving your phone number, reading addresses, or discussing dates and ages.
Numbers such as 60 are foundational to Hebrew fluency. Once you can confidently hear and produce numbers in real conversations, a huge range of everyday interactions become accessible.
Learning Numbers in Hebrew
What makes Hebrew numbers challenging
Hebrew numbers have masculine and feminine forms that must agree with the noun being counted — and counterintuitively, masculine nouns take feminine-looking number forms and vice versa. The right-to-left script means numbers (which are still left-to-right) create a visual direction switch in written text. The guttural sounds (kh, ayin) in several number words are difficult for English speakers. The traditional letter-based number system still appears on calendars, religious texts, and in formal contexts.
Tips for learning Hebrew numbers
Start with the feminine forms of digits 1-10 — these are the standard forms used for phone numbers and general counting. Practice reading numbers embedded in Hebrew text to get comfortable with the direction switch. Focus on the guttural sounds early, especially the 'kh' in khamesh (5). Modern Hebrew uses Arabic numerals for most purposes, so visual recognition is easy — the challenge is purely in speaking and listening.