700 in Japanese

700
Numeral
700
Sino-Japanese
七百 (nanahyaku)
Native Japanese
七百 (nanao)
Ordinal
七百 (nanao)

700 in Other Languages

About 700 in Japanese

To say 700 in Japanese, you use 七百 (nanahyaku). The ordinal form — used for rankings, dates, and sequences — is 七百 (nanao). The native counting form is 七百 (nanao).

700 is an even number. In Japanese-speaking environments, 700 is the kind of number you'll hear and need to use regularly, from market prices to building floor numbers.

Knowing 700 in Japanese is more useful than it might seem. Numbers are woven into nearly every type of conversation, and fluency with them makes everything from shopping to socializing dramatically easier.

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.