Any improper fraction can.
No, the first is singular and the second is plural/
In standard Roman numerals, there is no such number as "S", and using mixed-case characters (like "Cc") also does not represent anything. That is to say, SXCc is not a Roman numeral.
Divide 17 by 7. Put the remainder over 7. 2 and 3/7
The Romans did invent the lottery during the 1400s. They would paint roman numerals on clay balls that were then mixed up and drawn.
the disadvantages for roman numerals is that it is very!! long to right for big numbers, there are no place value, no zero also it get mixed up with letters and finally u can;t do arithmetic with it. thanks for looking hope u understand!
Of course not! 11/2 + 21/2 = 4 51/3 +32/3 = 9 67/8 + 51/8 = 12 921/32 + 311/32 = 13
The Japanese use the Arabic numerals as well as the Chinese numerals. In the vertical written pages it's usually Chinese numerals ( in novels etc ), the order is top to bottom, and since they are decimal numerals, have the same meaning , ie, 100's 10's 1's. In most contemporary usage, Arabic numerals are used, in which case it has the same order rules as in North America. ( left to right, 100's 10's 1's etc ) Some mixed uses appear, such as in restaurants where Arabic numerals are written top to bottom to indicate prices
The numerals that most Americans use are the Indian numerals or the Arabian numerals
Roman numerals were inspired by Etruscan numerals of which Roman numerals originated from.
It depends on what kind of numerals you are talking about: In Arabic numerals, it is 1000. In Roman numerals, it is M.
There are many but roman numerals refer tohindu arrabic numerals