C1 Spanish Numbers Quiz: Test Your Advanced Spanish Numbers
◄ Back to Spanish Numbers Quiz Hub ►
Master advanced Spanish numbers including millions, fractions, and complex decimal expressions! This C1 Spanish numbers quiz tests your understanding of numbers over one million (millón/millones), fractions like 1/2 (medio), 2/3 (dos tercios), and 3/4 (tres cuartos), plus advanced decimal readings and number agreement rules. Perfect for advanced learners who need to use Spanish numbers in academic, financial, and technical contexts!
C1 Spanish Numbers Tip: Millions: 1,000,000 = un millón, 2,000,000 = dos millones. Fractions: 1/2 = medio/un medio, 1/3 = un tercio, 2/3 = dos tercios, 1/4 = un cuarto, 3/4 = tres cuartos. Billions: un billón (1,000,000,000,000 – note Spanish billion is 12 zeros, not 9!).
Key Pattern: Fractions agree in gender and number with the noun: “medio litro” (half liter), “media hora” (half hour), “dos tercios de la población” (two thirds of the population).
Need more help? Use our Spanish Number Converter Tool to practice any number!
Spanish Millions Reference Table
| Number | Spanish |
|---|---|
| 1,000,000 | un millón |
| 2,000,000 | dos millones |
| 5,000,000 | cinco millones |
| 10,000,000 | diez millones |
| 100,000,000 | cien millones |
| 500,000,000 | quinientos millones |
| 1,000,000,000 | mil millones (not un billón) |
Important: In Spanish, “un billón” = 1,000,000,000,000 (12 zeros). For 1,000,000,000 (9 zeros), use “mil millones”.
Spanish Fractions Reference Table
| Fraction | Spanish | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 1/2 | medio / un medio | Changes gender: media hora |
| 1/3 | un tercio | |
| 2/3 | dos tercios | Plural for numerator > 1 |
| 1/4 | un cuarto | |
| 3/4 | tres cuartos | |
| 1/5 | un quinto | |
| 2/5 | dos quintos | |
| 1/8 | un octavo | |
| 3/8 | tres octavos |
Grammar Rule: Fractions agree in gender with the noun they modify. “Medio litro” (masculine) but “media hora” (feminine).
Common Mistakes at C1 Level
- Confusing billón with English billion – Spanish billón has 12 zeros, not 9
- Forgetting fraction agreement – “Media hora” not “medio hora”
- Wrong decimal separator – Spanish uses comma: 2,5 not 2.5
- Millón/millones agreement – “Un millón” but “dos millones”
Related Spanish Resources
- A1 Spanish Numbers Quiz – Numbers 1-30
- A2 Spanish Numbers Quiz – Numbers 31-100
- B1 Spanish Numbers Quiz – Hundreds and ordinals 1-10
- B2 Spanish Numbers Quiz – Thousands and ordinals 11-20
- Spanish Number Converter Tool – Convert any number instantly
