111 in Portuguese

111
Numeral
111
Cardinal
cento e onze
Ordinal
centésimo décimo primeiro

Nearby Portuguese Numbers

About 111 in Portuguese

To say 111 in Portuguese, you use cento e onze. The ordinal form — used for rankings, dates, and sequences — is centésimo décimo primeiro.

In mathematics, 111 is odd. 111 is a number worth knowing in Portuguese — it appears in real-world contexts like ages, distances, prices, and time expressions.

Building fluency with numbers like 111 in Portuguese pays dividends quickly. Numbers are among the first things you use in a new language — for shopping, directions, introductions, and understanding announcements.

Learning Numbers in Portuguese

What makes Portuguese numbers challenging

Gender affects not just 1 and 2 but all the hundreds (duzentos/duzentas, trezentos/trezentas, etc.), requiring you to know the gender of what you are counting. The billion/trillion difference between Brazilian and European Portuguese is a massive trap in financial contexts. European Portuguese pronunciation heavily reduces unstressed vowels, making numbers sound very different from the clear Brazilian pronunciation that most textbooks teach. The 'e' (and) connector between parts of compound numbers can be swallowed in fast speech.

Tips for learning Portuguese numbers

Learn whether you will primarily encounter Brazilian or European Portuguese — the pronunciation differs significantly. Master the masculine forms of gendered numbers first (um, dois, duzentos) as a baseline. Practice with prices — Portuguese and Brazilian currency amounts give excellent real-world number exposure. The 'e' connector in compound numbers is consistent and helps you segment long numbers. Listen to Portuguese-language media to train your ear for the specific dialect you need.