: Punjabi uses unique symbols for digits 0-9 (੦, ੧, ੨, ੩, ੪, ੫, ੬, ੭, ੮, ੯).

Read calendars, schedule appointments, and tell time accurately.

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Open a new tab right now. Either bookmark this page and convert it to PDF (Ctrl+P → Save as PDF), or search for a Gurmukhi number chart printable. In one week of reviewing your PDF for 10 minutes daily, you will confidently count to 100 in Punjabi.

: Learn the "tens" (10, 20, 30...) first. For example, 20 is Veeh , 30 is Teeh , 40 is Chali , and 50 is Panjah . Most intermediate numbers combine the unit sound with these base sounds.

: Master 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, 60, 70, 80, 90, and 100 first. Knowing the base anchors makes identifying the numbers in between much easier.

| # | Punjabi | Transliteration | # | Punjabi | Transliteration | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 51 | ਇਕਵੰਜਾ | Ikvanja | 56 | ਛਪਨ | Chhapan | | 52 | ਬਾਵੰਜਾ | Baavanja | 57 | ਸਤਾਵੰਜਾ | Sataavanja | | 53 | ਤਿਰਪੰਜਾ | Tirpanja | 58 | ਅਠਾਵੰਜਾ | Atthaavanja | | 54 | ਚੌਵੰਜਾ | Chauvanja | 59 | ਉਣਾਹਠ | Unaahathh | | 55 | ਪੰਜਾਵੰਜਾ | Panjaavanja| | | |