Wiki User
∙ 13y agoYes, although they look different from what we're used to seeing they are still numbers
Wiki User
∙ 13y agoYes because it is the same numeracy system that we use today
Yes the ancient Romans were able to add, subtract, divide and multiply They also had their own numeracy system known today as Roman numerals
Divide.
-4224
to add, you multiply... to subtract, you divide... weird, huh? haha!
Yes because it is the same numeracy system that we use today
Yes the ancient Romans were able to add, subtract, divide and multiply They also had their own numeracy system known today as Roman numerals
Divide.
Divide.
you divide and divide again then multiply then add then subtract then finally get the root
you can add subtract multiply and divide them.
-4224
it can multiply,divide,add and subtract.
No.No.No.No.
multiply divide answer subtract add
to add, you multiply... to subtract, you divide... weird, huh? haha!
For dividing they spelled it out for example, two-sevenths was "duae septimae" and three-eighths was "tres octavae." For multiplying they put horizontal a dash or line over the numeral and multiply by a thousand ...... I believed there was nor subtracting or adding just adding on or taking off numerals.