1,000,000 in Italian
1,000,000 in Other Languages
About 1,000,000 in Italian
1,000,000 translates to un milione. The ordinal form — used for rankings, dates, and sequences — is millionesimo.
The number 1,000,000 is even. In Italian-speaking environments, 1,000,000 is the kind of number you'll hear and need to use regularly, from market prices to building floor numbers.
For anyone learning Italian, numbers like 1,000,000 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 Italian
What makes Italian numbers challenging
Italian numbers are mostly regular but the teen split (11-16 vs 17-19) and the vowel-dropping in compounds (ventuno not ventiuno, ventotto not ventiotto) create small traps. Phone numbers can be read either digit-by-digit or as groups of hundreds, and you never know which style someone will use. The varying grouping style means a single number might be read as "trecentoquarantasette" (347 as one word) or "tre-quattro-sette" (3-4-7).
Tips for learning Italian numbers
Master the teen split first: 11-16 end with -dici, but 17-19 start with dici-. Learn which vowels drop in compounds (before uno and otto). Practice recognizing numbers both digit-by-digit and as spoken groups, since Italians switch between styles freely. Italian numbers have a musical quality — the rhythm and melody of the language helps with memorization. Prices, train platform numbers, and addresses make great real-world practice.