200 in Japanese

200
Numeral
200
Sino-Japanese
二百 (nihyaku)
Native Japanese
二百 (futao)
Ordinal
二百 (futao)

200 in Other Languages

About 200 in Japanese

The Japanese word for 200 is 二百 (nihyaku). The ordinal form — used for rankings, dates, and sequences — is 二百 (futao). The native counting form is 二百 (futao).

The number 200 is even. 200 is a number worth knowing in Japanese — it appears in real-world contexts like ages, distances, prices, and time expressions.

Numbers such as 200 are foundational to Japanese fluency. Once you can confidently hear and produce numbers in real conversations, a huge range of everyday interactions become accessible.

Learning Numbers in Japanese

What makes Japanese numbers challenging

Two parallel number systems (Sino-Japanese and native Japanese) that must be used in the right contexts. Counter words (classifiers) are mandatory — different objects require different counters based on shape, size, and category. The digits 4 and 7 each have two readings (shi/yon, shichi/nana) with strong cultural preferences: shi (4) sounds like death and is avoided. Large numbers are grouped by 10,000 (man) not 1,000, requiring mental re-grouping for English speakers. Sound changes (rendaku) alter some numbers when combined with counters.

Tips for learning Japanese numbers

Learn Sino-Japanese numbers first — they cover most situations including phone numbers, prices, dates, and math. Always use yon (not shi) for 4 and nana (not shichi) for 7 in everyday counting. Master the man (10,000) unit early for large numbers. Start with the general-purpose counter -tsu for objects before learning specific counters. Practice with Japanese prices (yen amounts are always large numbers since there are no decimal coins) for excellent real-world number comprehension.