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Generally the Roman numeral IV represents the number 4 but on some old watches and sun dials 4 is represented by the numeral IIII. The numeral IIII was correct when it was written but convention now decrees that a numeral should not be repeated more than three times. According to this rule IIII should no longer be used.
The Romans generally used the numeral IIII to represent the number 4. Later however, to bring this in line with the rule that states that no numeral should appear more than three times in succession, IV was adopted in preference to IIII. Some older watches, clocks and sundials still have the old version.
That is not a roman numeral.I = 1II = 2III = 3IV = 4V = 5VI = 6VII = 7VIII = 8IX = 9X= 10Another response:Actually, it was a Roman numeral. The Romans were superstitious, and since "IV" were the first two letters of Jupiter's name, they used IIII for four. That's why old fashioned clocks show IIII instead of IV.Another response:But now IV is used.Another response:I'm sorry, but I'd disagree. IV may well be used, but if one is using Roman numerals, one should use them as the Roman's did. Fancy clocks made today still do it the Roman way, with the IIII. If one wishes to be modern, or logically consistent, then one still doesn't use "IV", but rather "4".
The Roman numeral system is believed to have originated in ancient Rome around 3rd century BC. It was used by the Romans for various purposes, including numbering and record keeping, and continued to be used in Europe until the Middle Ages.
When writing large numbers in roman numerals, numbers that are in parenthesis represents "times 1000". Therefore, 1234567 would be written in roman numerals as (MCCXXXIV)DLXVII.