There is one primary reason why people are downvoting this: it seems, on-face, like a stupid question.
One reason it seems stupid is because any competent C programmer knows, or is expected to know, that identifiers cannot begin with numbers. You could know this by checking the standard, or you could know this by a few moments of thought. How is the parser to distinguish between numeric constants if other identifiers can begin with numbers?
Furthermore, it appears from the question itself that you already know this, since you say that you've tried it and the compiler isn't letting you do it. So confusion and frustration begins to set in—what do you expect an answer to contain, when you're asking a question about something that you know is impossible/forbidden by the language specifications?
Also, your question in its original form didn't contain any sort of discussion about why you might want to possibly do something that seems so foolish. There are many reasons why you wouldn't want to use this naming scheme besides technical limitations, not the least of which is that it makes the code extremely difficult to read and understand. Thus, absent a compelling reason, it looks like an exceptionally dumb thing to want to do and therefore not a practical programming problem.
And even once you added in your rationale, you buried it at the bottom, where people were only going to reach it after having read the majority of your question, after they had already drawn whatever conclusions they were going to draw. (And that assumes that people even made it that far before casting a vote.)
Finally, even for people who read and considered your rationale, this still seems like a bad question because it is extremely localized and unlikely to be of help to anyone else in the future. It also still reeks of asking how to do the impossible, when you already know it is impossible, and when you have already figured out the obvious workaround.
(Note that I'm not necessarily endorsing all of these viewpoints, nor defending them as "valid" reasons to downvote a question. I am just describing reality, as I see it. To help stave off some of the problems, I've edited your question—but no promises. And it's unlikely that most of the people who cast a downvote will return to remove it, even if my edit were to have changed their impression of the question [which it probably didn't].)