20. Counting & Ages
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四 can be よん or し, 七 can be なな or しち, and 九 can be きゅう or く. The し reading is avoided because it sounds like 死 (death), and しち can be confused with いち over the phone. In everyday conversation, people default to よん, なな, and きゅう to stay clear of these associations.
Adding お to いくつ makes the age question polite. This honorific prefix softens questions about personal information — you will hear it in おなまえ (your name), おしごと (your work), and おくに (your country). Dropping it and just saying いくつ? is perfectly fine with kids or close friends.
Japanese numbers almost always need a counter word that matches what you are counting — 歳 for ages, 人 for people, 個 for small objects. This lesson introduces 歳 and the ~人 pattern (何人, 三人). English has a few of these too, like "three sheets of paper" or "two head of cattle," but Japanese uses them with nearly everything.