all examples
Exercise 20
1 | 3 people | 2 | 10 apples |
3 | 4 friends | 4 | 3 cars |
5 | 2 documents | 6 | 12 bottles |
7 | 5 dogs | 8 | 7 houses |
9 | 4 rooms | 10 | 7 men |
11 | 8 slices of pizza | 12 | 2 skirts |
13 | 6 oranges | 14 | 4 TV’s |
15 | 2 letters | 16 | 3 tickets |
17 | 3 women | 18 | 2 mobile phones |
19 | 3 knives | 20 | Peter came to Phuket 4 times |
Scroll down for the answers …
1 | 3 khon | 2 | áaep-bpêrn 10 lûuk |
3 | phêuuan 4 khon | 4 | ród-yon 3 khan |
5 | àek-gà-săan 2 chà-bàp | 6 | khùuad 12 bai |
7 | măa 5 dtuua | 8 | bâan 7 lăng |
9 | 4 hâwng | 10 | phûu-chaai 7 khon |
11 | pizza 8 chín | 12 | grà-bproong 2 dtuua |
13 | sôm 6 lûuk | 14 | thee-wee 4 khrêuuang |
15 | jòd-măai 2 chà-bàp | 16 | dtŭua 3 bai |
17 | phûu-yĭng 3 khon | 18 | meuu-tĕuu 2 khrêuuang |
19 | mêed 3 lâem | 20 | Peter maa Phuket 4 khráng |
Bonus material
We also use classifiers with ordinal numbers (1st, 2nd, 3rd, etc.). We just add thêe in front of a number to make it ordinal, like this:
thêe nèung or raaek | first |
thêe săwng | second |
thêe săam | third |
thêe sèe | fourth |
etc. | etc. |
To use a classifier with an ordinal number, we place it between the noun and the number: