100 in Polish

100
Numeral
100
Cardinal
sto

Nearby Polish Numbers

100 in Other Languages

About 100 in Polish

When speaking Polish, 100 is expressed as sto.

The number 100 is even. In Polish-speaking environments, 100 is the kind of number you'll hear and need to use regularly, from market prices to building floor numbers.

Mastering numbers like 100 is one of the most practical skills when learning Polish. Unlike vocabulary that only applies in specific contexts, numbers come up constantly — in shops, on public transport, in conversations about time and money, and when meeting new people.

Learning Numbers in Polish

What makes Polish numbers challenging

Polish numbers interact with grammar in ways that make them among the hardest in Europe. The rules change at specific thresholds: 1 takes nominative, 2-4 take genitive singular, 5+ take genitive plural. The masculine-personal (virile) forms add another dimension when counting groups of men. Polish consonant clusters (cztery, trzydzieści, sześćdziesiąt) are extremely difficult for non-Slavic speakers to pronounce and distinguish. The nasal vowels (ę, ą) in some number words are unique to Polish.

Tips for learning Polish numbers

For listening comprehension, focus on recognizing the sound of each digit rather than producing grammatically perfect forms. The consonant clusters become easier with repeated exposure. Practice distinguishing cztery (4) from trzy (3) — this is the most common confusion point. Polish shopkeepers and taxi drivers are great sources of natural number practice. For phone numbers, individual digits bypass most grammatical complexity, making them a good starting point.