To 100 ((exclusive)) | Punjabi Numbers 1

| Number | Gurmukhi | Pronunciation | |--------|----------|---------------| | 10 | ੧੦ | Dass | | 20 | ੨੦ | Vee | | 30 | ੩੦ | Tih | | 40 | ੪੦ | Chalee | | 50 | ੫੦ | Panjaah | | 60 | ੬੦ | Sathaah | | 70 | ੭੦ | Sattar | | 80 | ੮੦ | Assi | | 90 | ੯੦ | Nabbay | | 100 | ੧੦੦ | Sau |

Pay attention to the nasal sounds (e.g., in nau(n) ) and doubled consonants ( tinn , satt , athh ), which are common in Punjabi. punjabi numbers 1 to 100

The foundation of counting in Punjabi lies in the first ten numbers. Unlike English, these must be memorized individually, as they don’t follow a predictable prefix-suffix pattern. Mastering Punjabi numbers 1 to 100 is entirely achievable

Mastering Punjabi numbers 1 to 100 is entirely achievable. The key is to memorize the first twenty as your building blocks, learn the ten “tens” (20-90), and then apply the simple pattern “tens + te + units” for the rest. With consistent practice – even just five minutes a day of counting objects around you – you will soon navigate markets, tell time, and share ages and dates in Punjabi with confidence. Remember: ikk to sau tak da safar, thoda jaari rakho (The journey from 1 to 100 – just keep going). Remember: ikk to sau tak da safar, thoda