Introduction

Welcome to an exciting journey into the world of bigger numbers! You’ve already learned numbers from 1 to 100, and now you’re ready to explore even more. Learning numbers from 101 to 200 is like climbing the next step on a ladder—you already know how to climb, so this will feel familiar and fun!

In this chapter, you’ll discover that numbers beyond 100 follow the same patterns you already know. Just like you learned that 21 is “twenty-one” and 35 is “thirty-five,” you’ll see that 121 is “one hundred twenty-one” and 135 is “one hundred thirty-five.” By the end of this chapter, you’ll be able to count, read, and write all the numbers up to 200 with confidence!


Part 1: Understanding the Pattern

What Does “101” Mean?

When we write 101, we’re really saying:

  • 1 hundred + 0 tens + 1 one
  • We read it as: “one hundred one”

Let’s break down a few examples:

Number Hundreds Tens Ones Number Name
101 1 0 1 One hundred one
110 1 1 0 One hundred ten
115 1 1 5 One hundred fifteen
125 1 1 5 One hundred twenty-five
150 1 5 0 One hundred fifty

The Magic Pattern

Here’s the secret: Numbers from 101-199 all start with “one hundred”!

After “one hundred,” you just add the number names you already know from 1-99.

Examples:

  • 101 = one hundred + one = one hundred one
  • 115 = one hundred + fifteen = one hundred fifteen
  • 142 = one hundred + forty-two = one hundred forty-two
  • 189 = one hundred + eighty-nine = one hundred eighty-nine

Part 2: Breaking It Down by Groups

Numbers 101-110

These numbers are special because they have zero tens:

  • 101: one hundred one
  • 102: one hundred two
  • 103: one hundred three
  • 104: one hundred four
  • 105: one hundred five
  • 106: one hundred six
  • 107: one hundred seven
  • 108: one hundred eight
  • 109: one hundred nine
  • 110: one hundred ten

Practice Tip: Say these out loud every day. Notice how they sound just like 1, 2, 3… with “one hundred” at the beginning!

Numbers 111-120

These are your “teens” in the hundreds:

  • 111: one hundred eleven
  • 112: one hundred twelve
  • 113: one hundred thirteen
  • 114: one hundred fourteen
  • 115: one hundred fifteen
  • 116: one hundred sixteen
  • 117: one hundred seventeen
  • 118: one hundred eighteen
  • 119: one hundred nineteen
  • 120: one hundred twenty

Remember: Just like eleven through nineteen were tricky when you first learned them, these follow the same pattern with “one hundred” added first!

Numbers by Tens (121-190)

Once you get past 120, the pattern becomes super easy:

120s:

  • 121-129: one hundred twenty-one, one hundred twenty-two… one hundred twenty-nine

130s:

  • 130-139: one hundred thirty, one hundred thirty-one… one hundred thirty-nine

140s:

  • 140-149: one hundred forty, one hundred forty-one… one hundred forty-nine

150s:

  • 150-159: one hundred fifty, one hundred fifty-one… one hundred fifty-nine

And so on through the 160s, 170s, 180s, and 190s!

The Special Number: 200

200 is read as “two hundred”

This is where we start a whole new hundred! Instead of “one hundred,” we now say “two hundred.”


Part 3: Tips and Tricks to Learn Number Names

Trick #1: The “One Hundred Plus” Method

Think of every number from 101-199 as “one hundred plus something”

  • What’s 137? It’s one hundred + 37 = one hundred thirty-seven
  • What’s 163? It’s one hundred + 63 = one hundred sixty-three

If you already know how to say numbers 1-99, you can say any number up to 199!

Trick #2: Use Your Fingers for the Last Two Digits

When reading 156:

  1. Say “one hundred” first
  2. Look at the last two digits: 56
  3. You already know 56 is “fifty-six”
  4. Put them together: one hundred fifty-six

Trick #3: The Hyphen Rule

Remember to use a hyphen (-) when writing number names for numbers like:

  • Twenty-one, thirty-five, forty-eight (from 21-99)
  • This continues in the hundreds: one hundred twenty-one, one hundred forty-eight

But NOT for:

  • Numbers ending in zero: one hundred ten, one hundred fifty (no hyphen needed)
  • The “hundred” part: “one hundred” (no hyphen between one and hundred)

Trick #4: Counting by Tens

Practice counting by tens to make learning faster:

  • 100, 110, 120, 130, 140, 150, 160, 170, 180, 190, 200
  • Say them out loud: “one hundred, one hundred ten, one hundred twenty…”

Trick #5: Create Number Stories

Make up stories with numbers:

  • “I have one hundred fifteen stickers in my collection!”
  • “The dinosaur lived one hundred seventy million years ago!”
  • “My school has one hundred eighty students!”

Using numbers in sentences helps you remember them better.

Trick #6: Look for Patterns on a Number Chart

Create or look at a hundreds chart that shows 101-200. You’ll notice:

  • Each row goes up by 1
  • Each column goes up by 10
  • All numbers in the same column end with the same digit

Trick #7: Practice with Real Objects

  • Count 101-200 using blocks, beads, or drawings
  • Group them into one hundred plus the extra amount
  • This helps you SEE what the numbers mean

Part 4: Common Mistakes to Avoid

Mistake #1: Forgetting “Hundred”

❌ Wrong: “One twenty-five” for 125 ✅ Correct: “One hundred twenty-five”

Mistake #2: Mixing Up the Order

❌ Wrong: “Twenty-one hundred five” for 125 ✅ Correct: “One hundred twenty-five”

The hundred always comes first!

Mistake #3: Adding “And”

❌ Wrong: “One hundred and thirty” ✅ Correct: “One hundred thirty”

In American English, we don’t use “and” when saying these numbers.

Mistake #4: Confusing 115 and 150

  • 115 = one hundred fifteen (teen number)
  • 150 = one hundred fifty (has a 5 in the tens place)

Look carefully at the middle digit!


 

Quick Reference Guide

Key Rules to Remember:

  1. All numbers from 101-199 start with “one hundred”
  2. After “one hundred,” add the number name for 1-99
  3. Use hyphens for compound numbers (twenty-one, thirty-five, etc.)
  4. 200 is “two hundred”—a new hundred begins!

Number Name Formula:

For 101-199: “One hundred” + [number name for the last two digits]

Examples:

  • 134 → “one hundred” + “thirty-four” = one hundred thirty-four
  • 178 → “one hundred” + “seventy-eight” = one hundred seventy-eight

Conclusion

Congratulations! You’ve now learned how to count, read, and write numbers from 101 to 200. The most important thing to remember is that these numbers follow the same patterns you already know—you just add “one hundred” at the beginning.

Think of learning numbers like building with blocks. You started with small numbers (1-10), then you learned bigger numbers (11-100), and now you’ve added another layer (101-200). Each layer builds on what you learned before, making you stronger at math every day!

The more you practice saying, reading, and writing these numbers, the easier they become. Soon, you’ll be reading numbers like 156, 178, and 194 without even thinking about it. You might even be ready to explore numbers beyond 200!

Remember: Every big mathematician started exactly where you are now. Keep practicing, stay curious, and have fun with numbers. You’re doing an amazing job!


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