Numbers

Here are the basic numbers from one to ten:

kenne "one" pácchitak "six"
  ossa
"two"   seeloowih
"seven"
  teleeka "three"   óssuwah "eight"
  huya "four"   kénnekotoh "nine"
  kenekkuh "five"   kicchih "ten"

You say the numbers from 11 to 19 by adding wallik "increased" to the basic number, very much like "teen" in English.
kenne wallik 11 pácchitak wallik 16
  ossa wallik
12   seeloowih wallik
17
  teleeka wallik 13   óssuwah wallik 18
  huya wallik 14   kénnekotoh wallik    19
  kenekkuh wallik    15      
           
The numbers for multiples of ten add kicchih "ten" to the basic number, very much like "–ty" in English "forty" and "fifty."
  ossa kicchih
20   pácchitak kiccih 60
  teleeka kicchih 30   seeloowih kiccih
70
  huya kiccih 40   óssuwah kiccih 80
  kenekkuh kiccih 50   kénnekotoh kiccih 90
           
For numbers between multiples of ten, such as "twenty one," you add the single-digit number after kicchih "ten."
ossa kicchih kenne 21 — "two tens one"
  ossa kicchih ossa 22 — "two tens two"
  ossa kicchih teleeka 23 — "two tens three"
  ossa kicchih huya 24 — "two tens four"
  ossa kicchih kenekkuh    25 — "two tens five"
     
The word for "hundred" — siyento — is borrowed from Spanish ciento "hundred."
siyento 100
  kenne siyento kenne 101 — "one hundred one"
  kenne siyento ossa 102 — "one hundred two"
  kenne siyento huya 104 — "one hundred four"
  kenne siyento kénnekotoh 109 — "one hundred nine"
     
  kenne siyento kenne wallik 110 — "one hundred one increased"
  kenne siyento kenne wallik kenne   111 — "one hundred one increased one"
  kenne siyento kenne wallik ossa 112 — "one hundred one increased two"
     
  kenne siyento ossa wallik 120 — "one hundred two increased"
  kenne siyento ossa wallik kenne 121 — "one hundred two increased one"
     
  kenne siyento huya wallik 140 — "one hundred four increased"
  kenne siyento huya wallik huya 144 — "one hundred four increased four"
     
  ossa siyento 200 — "two hundred"
  teleeka siyento ossa kicchih 320 — "three hundred two tens"
  huya siyento teleeka kicchih huya   434— "four hundred three tens four"
  pácchitak siyento kénnekotoh 609 — "six hundred eight"
  óssuwah siyento huya kicchih 840 — "eight hundred four tens"
  óssuwah siyento huya kicchih seeloowih 847 — "nine hundred four increased seven"

There's a very good chance that the Coast Miwok word for "thousand" would have been borrowed from Spanish mil "thousand," so it probably would have been mil — but we don't know this for sure.
ossa mil 2000
  ossa mil huya    2004