In roman numerals, 108 would be CVIII. C for one hundred and VIII for eight.
It is: CVIII = 108
108
CVIII
(CIII)CVIII
In roman numerals, 108 would be CVIII. C for one hundred and VIII for eight.
It is: CVIII = 108
CVIII
108 = CVIII
108
CVIII
(CIII)CVIII
108 in Roman numerals is CVIII (100+8=108)
108 as a Roman numeral = CVIII C=100 VIII =8
The Rumpler C.VIII was a German single-engine biplane advanced trainer manufactured by Rumpler Flugzeugwerke, in Berlin Johannisthal, in 1917.
This usually means a barre, with the roman numeral indicating which fret. So Ciii indicates a barre on the third fret - hold down all strings with the first finger. CVIII would indicate the 8th fret. Sometimes you might see 1/2CIII which would mean a partial bar - holding down only a few of the strings.
Today we would convert the above numbers into Roman numerals as IX, XCIX, CMXCIX and MCMXCIX respectively which makes any form of mathematical operations with them almost impossible. But during the Roman era the equivalent of 9 99 999 and 1999 were probably wrote out in a simplified format of IX, IC, IM and IMM respectively which makes addition straightforward as follows:- IX+IC = CVIII (9+99 = 108) CVIII+IM = MCVII (108+999 = 1,107) MCVII+IMM = MMMCVI (1,107+1,999 = 3,106) So when added together the answer is: MMMCVI which is the equivalent of 3,106