Numbers and Counting in Samoan

Counting to 10 in Samoan is pretty straight forward: Tasi, lua, tolu, fā, lima, ono, fitu, valu, iva, sefulu.

Once you know the Samoan words for the numbers 1 to 10, it’s not too difficult to count to 100 and beyond.

Let’s take a closer look.

Pronouncing Numbers 1 to 10 in Samoan

Samoan numbers are very similar to those of other Polynesian languages, so if you’ve learned to count in Hawaiian, this will be easy.

Here are the Samoan numbers from 1 to 10 with audio:

O
0 (zero)
tasi
1
lua
2
tolu
3
4
lima
5
ono
6
fitu
7
valu
8
iva
9
sefulu
10

 As you can see, the Samoan word for 10 is sefulu.

The Numbers 10 to 20 in Samoan

To count past 10 and into the “teens”, just add one of the numbers we already know to sefulu to make a new number.

For example, 11 is 10 and 1, so in Samoan, 11 is sefulu and tasi, or sefulu ma le (and the) tasi.

See how that works?

In everyday Samoan, we often drop the and the (ma le) and just say sefulutasi.

sefulutasi
11
sefululua
12
sefulutolu
13
sefulufā
14
sefululima
15
sefuluono
16
sefulufitu
17
sefuluvalu
18
sefuluiva
19
[AUDIO] luasefulu
20

Counting Past 20 in Samoan

From 20, we switch up the order that we put the numbers together.

For example, to say 12, we use the words for 10 and 2 (sefulu ma le lua, or sefululua), but for the number 20, we think 2 and 10 instead.

So 20 is lua (2) + sefulu (10), or luasefulu.

This will be the same pattern for 30 (tolu + sefulu), 40 ( + sefulu), 50 (lima + sefulu) and right up to 90.

And then we just add the incremental numbers. So for 21, we would think 2 + 10 + 1 and say luasefulu ma le tasi, or just luasefulutasi.

luasefulu
20
luasefulutasi
21
luasefululua
22
luasefulutolu
23
luasefulufā
24
luasefululima
25
luasefuluono
26
luasefulufitu
27
luasefuluvalu
28
luasefuluiva
29
tolusefulu
30

And our numbers just continue like that right up to 100.

Counting to 100 and Beyond in Samoan

Now, our word for 100 is selau. Our word for 200 is lua (2) selau. Our word for 300 is tolu (3) selau. See that?

Our pattern for numbers after 100 (or any hundred) is very simple and predictable, now.

For 102, we would say selau ma le lua. For 112, we say selau sefulu lua. For 122, we say selau lua sefulu ma le lua. And for 222, we say lua selau, luasefulu ma le lua.

Got it?

selau
100
lua selau
200
tolu selau
300
selau ma le lima
105
selau onosefulu (ma le) tolu
163
luaselau limasefulu valu
258
fā selau ivasefulu fitu
497
(tasi le) afe
1000
tasi le afe luaselau (or afe luaselau)
1200
lua afe tolu selau limasefulu
2350
lima afe selau luasefulu ono
5126
fitu afe valu selau ivasefulu ma le lua
7892

Bonus Lesson: Counting People

All the numbers we’ve mentioned so far are used for all counting situations, but because our culture has a special regard for humans, when we count people, we always add the word to’a in front of the number. For example:

I have 3 houses. | E tolu o’u fale.
I have 3 children. | E to’a tolu la’u fānau.
She has 5 dogs. | E lima ana maile.
She has 5 teachers. | E to’a lima ona faiaoga.

So don’t forget. When you’re counting people, it’s correct to add the word to’a before the number.