2,000 in Indonesian
2,000 in Other Languages
About 2,000 in Indonesian
When speaking Indonesian, 2,000 is expressed as dua ribu.
2,000 is an even number. 2,000 comes up regularly in Indonesian conversations — in stores, when giving your phone number, reading addresses, or discussing dates and ages.
For anyone learning Indonesian, numbers like 2,000 are essential early targets. They appear in tasks as common as buying a coffee, reading a menu, catching a bus, or asking someone their age.
Learning Numbers in Indonesian
What makes Indonesian numbers challenging
Indonesian numbers are remarkably straightforward — the biggest challenge is simply their unfamiliarity. The words are phonetic and regular, but longer numbers (ribu for thousand, juta for million) can take a moment to parse at speed. The prefix se- replaces satu (one) in compounds: seratus (100) not satu ratus, seribu (1000) not satu ribu. Zero has two forms: nol and kosong (empty), both used in phone contexts, which can initially confuse learners.
Tips for learning Indonesian numbers
Indonesian numbers are the easiest of any major language to learn. Memorize 1-10 and the combining rules, and you can handle any number. Practice the se- prefix for 100 (seratus), 1000 (seribu), and other round multiples. Get comfortable with both nol and kosong for zero. Indonesian pronunciation is completely phonetic — sounds match spelling consistently. This is an excellent first language for number practice.