What Time Is It?
Numbers 1-100 and Time
The Vibe
Ticket, number, price, time
You are standing at a ticket counter, looking at a board, trying to understand how much the ticket costs, when the bus leaves, and what time it is. In `A1_U09`, numbers stop being an abstract list and become the language of everyday decisions. This unit is about time, transport, prices, and all the places where Romanian numbers are actually needed daily.
By the end of this unit you can
- count in the main range and recognize numbers 1-100
- ask for and understand the time
- understand prices, numbers, and basic transport information
- use numbers inside short everyday scenes
Numbers and time as everyday tools
At A1, numbers are not about math drills. They are about fast recognition where they live: tickets, price tags, schedules, and clocks.
| Function | Romanian | Where it helps |
|---|---|---|
| count the basics | unu, doi, trei, patru... | prices, addresses, platforms |
| tens | zece, douăzeci, treizeci... | time, amounts, route numbers |
| ask the time | Cât e ceasul? | train station, meeting, daily schedules |
| on the hour | Este ora trei. | clock time |
| half / quarter | Este trei și jumătate. | conversational time |
Grammar Hack
First 1-10, then the tens, then the most useful numbers in between.
Useful chunks are `Este ora...`, `și jumătate`, and `fără un sfert`.
Tickets, price tags, and schedules teach them better than a flat list.
It is one of the most practical ready-made A1 questions.
Bus `34`, ticket `12 lei`, platform `5` are exactly the kind of input learners need.
Where numbers really come alive
time and meetings
Clocks and appointments are the most direct everyday use case for numbers.
- Cât e ceasul?
- Este ora trei.
- Este patru și jumătate.
tickets, platforms, prices
Transport and ticket counters make numbers useful very fast.
- Biletul costă doisprezece lei.
- Autobuzul treizeci și patru.
- Peronul cinci.
Unit words and expressions
- unu, doi, trei
- zece, douăzeci, treizeci
- sută
- ceas
- oră
- bilet
- lei
- autobuz
- peron
- costă
Ready-made phrases
- Cât e ceasul?
- Este ora trei.
- Este patru și jumătate.
- Biletul costă doisprezece lei.
- Autobuzul treizeci și patru.
Nice to Know: numbers are often heard before they are analyzed
In practice, learners often start recognizing numbers by ear in fixed places first: `ora trei`, `doisprezece lei`, `peronul cinci`. That is a normal path and worth supporting.
Mini dialogue: ticket counter
Notice: in real dialogue, numbers come in quick succession. The clerk gives all info at once: price (doisprezece lei), bus number (treizeci și patru), platform (cinci), and time (ora patru).
Practice in this unit
- ● Number Match
- ● Clock Reading
- ● Ticket Price
- ● Time Repair
- ● Platform Fill
- ● Mini Travel Info
Shadowing: ticket counter and time check
Listen to the numbers inside real context: time, price, route number, platform. Repeat whole information chunks rather than isolated numerals.
Flashcards as real-life number chunks
Here flashcards work best not only as `3 = trei`, but as chunks like `ora trei`, `doisprezece lei`, and `autobuzul 34`.
Checkpoint
- ✓ I recognize numbers 1-100 in basic contexts
- ✓ I can ask for and understand the time
- ✓ I understand a ticket price and a transport number
- ✓ I use numbers inside everyday scenes, not only as a list
Flashcards
Exercises
Number Match
Match the numeral with the Romanian form.
Clock Reading
Look at the time and give the Romanian line.
Ticket Price
Fill in the needed numeral.
Time Repair
Fix the lines: the time and number are built incorrectly.
Este ora trei jumătate. Biletul costă trei și patru lei.
Platform Fill
Sort the number chunks by situation type.
Range Sorting
Sort numbers by range: singles, teens, and tens.
Speed and Numbers
Listening to a real dialogue? Choose what the clerk usually says and in what order.
You hear at the station: 'Autobuzul... pleacă la ora...' This is about
At the counter: 'Doisprezece lei. Peronul cinci.' This means:
When the clerk says 'Este ora patru și jumătate', this is
Numbers in a typical travel dialogue usually come in this order:
Mini Travel Info
Build a short travel/info block in 2-3 lines.
1.Say the time.
2.Add a ticket price.
3.Add a bus or platform number.
Practice saying this out loud.