Menu
🇲🇾 May 1, 2026 By Ahmad Razif beginner

Numbers and Time in Malay: A Beginner Guide

Malay numbers are easy to learn and follow a clear pattern. This guide covers counting, telling the time, and a few useful expressions for daily life.

#numbers #time #beginner

Malay (Bahasa Melayu) numbers are one of the easiest parts of the language to pick up. The system is logical, has no irregular forms, and shares the same structure as Indonesian — so if you know one, the other is nearly identical.

The base numbers

NumberMalay
1satu
2dua
3tiga
4empat
5lima
6enam
7tujuh
8lapan
9sembilan
10sepuluh

Note: Malay uses lapan for 8, while Indonesian uses delapan.

How tens and hundreds work

The system is completely regular:

  • 11 — sebelas
  • 12 — dua belas
  • 20 — dua puluh
  • 25 — dua puluh lima
  • 100 — seratus
  • 1,000 — seribu

The prefix se- means one of something (seratus = one hundred, seribu = one thousand).

Telling the time

The word for hour or o’clock is pukul:

  • Pukul satu — one o’clock
  • Pukul lapan — eight o’clock

For half past, use setengah before the next hour:

  • Pukul setengah tiga — half past two (half of three)

For minutes, use minit with lebih (past) or kurang (to):

  • Pukul tiga lebih lima minit — five minutes past three
  • Pukul empat kurang sepuluh minit — ten minutes to four

Useful time expressions

  • Sekarang pukul berapa? — What time is it now?
  • Pagi — morning
  • Petang — afternoon/evening
  • Malam — night

Numbers come up constantly in markets, transport schedules, and restaurants — making them well worth learning early.