Cardinals and Ordinals

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Slide 1: Video
EngelsMiddelbare schoolhavoLeerjaar 1

This lesson contains 14 slides, with interactive quizzes, text slides and 1 video.

time-iconLesson duration is: 45 min

Items in this lesson

Slide 1 - Video

where do you use numbers?

Slide 2 - Mind map




Numbers

Slide 3 - Slide

There are two kinds of numbers. Do you know which two kinds?
A
ordinary and extraordinary numbers
B
cardinal and ordinal numbers
C
plain and special numbers
D
there are no two kinds of numbers, Miss! What were you thinking?!

Slide 4 - Quiz

So we have cardinals and ordinals. 

we use cardinals for counting
one, two, three, four...

Slide 5 - Slide

So we have cardinals and ordinals. 

we use ordinals when we want to give order to things.
first, second, third, fourth...

Slide 6 - Slide

cardinals
ordinals
Twenty-first century
he came in second place
The simpsons are on channel nine
world war two lasted more then five years
The steamengine was invented in the nineteenth century
You are in first grade. 
most of you are twelve years old
The first world war lasted from nineteenfourteen to nineteeneighteen

Slide 7 - Drag question

Cardinal > Ordinal
In general the rule is to add TH to the cardinal, as in:
four > fourth
ten > tenth
Mind this:
fifty > fiftieth
seventy > seventieth
One hundred > one hundredth
Exceptions are: 
one > first (or 1st).
 two > second (or 2nd).
three > third (or 3rd)

And for some ordinals there are changes in spelling:
five > fifth
eight > eighth
nine > ninth
twelve > twelfth

Slide 8 - Slide


A few things that you must also remember!

 Er staat een - tussen de tientallen (decimals) en de enen (numerals) als je hoger gaat dan 20:
Cardinals:
21 is written as twenty-one, 22 is written as twenty-two etc.

Ordinals:
21st is written as twenty-first, 22nd is written as twenty-second, 23rd is written as twenty-third etc.

Slide 9 - Slide

One more thing...
When you come to the hundreds or even thousands you spell them as if you count the hundreds/thousands/millions.
Like so:
(one) hundred, two hundred, five thousand, ten million etc.
(note that there's no hyphen!)

Slide 10 - Slide

What number is spelled correctly?
A
My father is fifty-five years old.
B
Mum celebrated her fiftysecond birthday.
C
Her brother got his seventh birthdaycard.
D
Grandma has eightytwo candles on her birthdaycake

Slide 11 - Quiz

When do you need to use a hyphen (een streepje) between numbers?
A
Between the first and the second letter.
B
Above twenty, between the decimal and the numeral.
C
Only with ordinal numbers.
D
When cardinals are spelled wrongly.

Slide 12 - Quiz

How old is Mrs Hogemans?
A
She is forty-four years old.
B
She is forty-four but she acts as if she were twelve.
C
She pretends to be young but is really, really old.
D
She is almost forty-five.

Slide 13 - Quiz

Questions?

Slide 14 - Slide