Ordinal Numbers in Spanish: Standard complicated Form and what you may hear instead

orginal numbers
orginal numbers

A simple guide to Spanish ordinals, common Mexican usage, and how French, Italian, and English handle the same idea.

Ordinal numbers express order: first, second, third, and so on. In Spanish, the first ten are familiar, but after that the system becomes less regular and more variable in real life.

The standard forms

Traditional Spanish ordinals include primero, segundo, tercero, cuarto, quinto, sexto, séptimo, octavo, noveno, and décimo. They agree in gender and number, for example, Quinta Avenida for Fifth Avenue.

After that, Spanish continues with forms such as undécimo, duodécimo, decimotercero, decimocuarto, and decimoquinto.

For example, 80th, the standard form is octogésimo; for 90th, it is nonagésimo. And so on.

Everyday usage (For example, in Mexico)

In Mexico, people often simplify the system and use forms that come from cardinal numbers. That is why you may hear expressions like onceavo piso (11th floor) or doceavo piso (12th floor) in everyday speech, even though those forms are not the strict standard. Onceavo is partitive 1/11 un onceavo, 1/12 is un doceavo.

These forms are best described as common, informal, or nonstandard. Spanish ordinals can be complicated enough that speakers sometimes prefer the easier option, adding avo, ava, avos, avas especially outside formal writing.

The same tendency can produce forms like ochentavo and noventavo. They are understandable by analogy, but the formal ordinals remain octogésimo and nonagésimo.

Cardinals in titles and names

Spanish also uses cardinal numbers in some names and titles. A well-known example is the pope: Benedicto XVI is commonly said in Spanish as Benedicto dieciséis, not Benedicto décimo sexto.

This shows that written Roman numerals do not always correspond to the ordinal form people would expect. In some fixed expressions, Spanish simply switches to cardinal number to avoid complicated ordinal numbers.

French examples

French is more regular than Spanish in this area. Examples include premier for 1st, deuxième for 2nd, onzième for 11th, douzième for 12th, vingt et unième for 21st, and quatre-vingtième for 80th.

After premier, French ordinals usually follow a predictable pattern with -ième.

Italian examples

Italian is also fairly regular. Examples include primo for 1st, secondo for 2nd, undicesimo for 11th, dodicesimo for 12th, ventunesimo for 21st, and ottantesimo for 80th.

Italian ordinals are still much more predictable than Spanish once you move beyond the first ten.

English examples

English is the simplest of the four in writing because most ordinals just add -th: first, second, third, eleventh, twelfth, twenty-first, and eightieth.

English has a few irregular forms, but the overall system is much easier than Spanish.

Why Spanish feels less regular

Spanish keeps traditional ordinals, but speakers also use simplified forms in daily life. That mix makes the system feel inconsistent, especially after 10.

So while the formal forms matter for writing and careful speech, ordinary usage often leans toward whatever sounds easiest and most natural in context.

Core examples

Meaning Spanish (often confusing) French Italian English
1st primero premier primo first
11th undécimo / décimo primero / onceavo (informal) onzième undicesimo eleventh
12th duodécimo / décimo segundo / doceavo (informal) douzième dodicesimo twelfth
16th decimosexto / dieciséis in the case of Pope Benedict XVI / dieciseisavo (very informal) seizième sedicesimo sixteenth
21st vigésimo primero. Some people might say veintiunésimo, ventiunavo, which are non standard, and maybe some other improvised variations, or people simply would use the safer cardinal veintiuno. vingt et unième ventunesimo twenty-first
80th octogésimo / ochentavo (nonstandard). Some people might say octagésimo with “a”, which is not standard.. quatre-vingtième ottantesimo eightieth
90th nonagésimo / noventavo (nonstandard) quatre-vingt-dixième novantesimo ninetieth

Now check this craziness out

Number Spanish French Italian English
352 tricentésimo quincuagésimo segundo trois cent cinquante-deuxième trecentocinquantaduesimo three hundred fifty-second
354 tricentésimo quincuagésimo cuarto trois cent cinquante-quatrième trecentocinquantaquattresimo three hundred fifty-fourth
457 cuadringentésimo quincuagésimo séptimo quatre cent cinquante-septième quattrocentocinquantasettesimo four hundred fifty-seventh
555 quingentésimo quincuagésimo quinto cinq cent cinquante-cinquième cinquecentocinquantacinquesimo five hundred fifty-fifth
973 noningentésimo septuagésimo tercero neuf cent soixante-treizième novecentosettantatreesimo nine hundred seventy-third

Why Spanish is harder

Spanish preserves old Latin-style ordinal formation much more heavily for formal numbers. For example, 300th is tricentésimo, 500th is quingentésimo, and 900th is noningentésimo.

Then these pieces combine into longer forms. So 973rd becomes 900th + 70th + 3rd, or noningentésimo septuagésimo tercero.

In theory, the system is mathematically systematic. In practice, it is often unusable in daily conversation, because most speakers simply avoid saying such long ordinals aloud.

A funny reality is that many native speakers would probably make mistakes with these forms or skip them entirely and use a simpler expression instead.

Simple conclusion

Spanish ordinals are standard in formal writing, but everyday speech often simplifies them, especially beyond 10. That is why people may say onceavo piso or doceavo piso, even though the traditional forms are different. In titles and names, Spanish may also prefer cardinals, as in Papa Benedicto dieciséis (Pope Benedict XVI). Compared with Spanish, French and Italian are more regular, and English is the easiest because it usually just adds -th.


References

  • RAE, ordinales and tabla de numerales.
  • FundéuRAE, guidance on onceavo, doceavo, and related ordinal usage.
  • Vatican News, biographical reference for Benedicto XVI.
  • French and Italian ordinal examples consistent with standard grammar references.

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