yes
It is because last time they had no place value.... It was not made up then
Place value is not used in the Roman numeral system.
The Place Value System Originated From The Indus Valley civilization I Think.
No, the Roman numeral system is not a place value system. In the Roman numeral system, each individual symbol represents a specific value, and there is no concept of place value. Place value systems, such as the decimal system, rely on the position of digits within a number to determine their value.
The Egyptian number system was based on a decimal system, which means it was structured around the number ten. They used a combination of symbols to represent different powers of ten, such as 1, 10, 100, 1,000, and so on. This system was primarily additive, meaning numbers were formed by combining these symbols rather than using a place value system like the one we use today.
It is because last time they had no place value.... It was not made up then
The Romans didnt use the place value system
Why is 10 important in our place value system
Place value is not used in the Roman numeral system.
The Place Value System Originated From The Indus Valley civilization I Think.
No, the Roman numeral system is not a place value system. In the Roman numeral system, each individual symbol represents a specific value, and there is no concept of place value. Place value systems, such as the decimal system, rely on the position of digits within a number to determine their value.
The place value of Roman numerals are self evident that's why the system doesn't need a zero figure for positional place value purposes which is essential in the Hindu-Arabic numeral system.
No Greek Acrophonic numbers do not have place value as they are not a positional system.
Seven hundred thousand
It has a place value system
No
Tenths