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Roman numerals
plural noun
- the letters used by the Romans for the representation of cardinal numbers, still used occasionally today. The integers are represented by the following letters: I (= 1), V (= 5), X (= 10), L (= 50), C (= 100), D (= 500), and M (= 1000). If a numeral is followed by another numeral of lower denomination, the two are added together; if it is preceded by one of lower denomination, the smaller numeral is subtracted from the greater. Thus VI = 6 (V + I), but IV = 4 (V – I). Other examples are XC (= 90), CL (= 150), XXV (= 25), XLIV (= 44). Multiples of a thousand are indicated by a superior bar: thus, ̅V = 5000, ̅X = 10 000, ̅X̅D = 490 000, etc
Roman numerals
- Letters of the alphabet used in ancient Rome to represent numbers: I = 1; V = 5; X = 10; L = 50; C = 100; D = 500; M = 1000. The numbers one through ten are written I, II, III, IV, V, VI, VII, VIII, IX, and X. Roman numerals are often used to signify divisions of a long work, or of a work with many parts. They are also used to lend significance to something, as in Super Bowl VII. Formal designation of years may also be in Roman numerals: a.d. MCMLXXXIX = a.d. 1989.
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Example Sentences
Character names, Roman Numerals and other abbreviations have been marked with abbreviation tags.
From Project Gutenberg
Transcriber's Note: The headings for Chapters 8, 11, and 12 have been retained as roman numerals, as printed.
From Project Gutenberg
Page 451: Some of the Roman Numerals were overlined in the original; those overlines may not be shown on some reading devices.
From Project Gutenberg
Numbers of infrequent occurrence should be spelled out rather than put in roman numerals.
From Project Gutenberg
The number of the volume in roman numerals of capital letters.
From Project Gutenberg
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