Taiwan and China do, although the usage there is diminishing in favour of Indian numerals (0123456789)
Some countries only use Roman Numerals, so they use it a lot.
they use roman numerals in films to show you when it was made but i dont know about any countries that use it
Chinese, Japanese and Korean all use Chinese characters for words, but each of these languages use them a bit differently. All three of these languages also can use Arabic numerals or Chinese characters to write numbers. Korean and Japanese languages share many commonalities in grammar and structure. Although Korean and Japanese use a lot of Chinese characters in writing, these two languages are drastically different from Chinese.
Most countries still use Roman numerals in one way or another as for example they are sometimes found on clocks and watches.
I believe it is almost universal now.
Yes, Chinese people use the Arabic numerals, and Chinese has their own numbers writing in Chinese!
Some countries only use Roman Numerals, so they use it a lot.
they use roman numerals in films to show you when it was made but i dont know about any countries that use it
Chinese numeral characters, which are part of the written Chinese language, are still in use. Arabic numerals are also widely used in China.
Chinese, Japanese and Korean all use Chinese characters for words, but each of these languages use them a bit differently. All three of these languages also can use Arabic numerals or Chinese characters to write numbers. Korean and Japanese languages share many commonalities in grammar and structure. Although Korean and Japanese use a lot of Chinese characters in writing, these two languages are drastically different from Chinese.
Most countries still use Roman numerals in one way or another as for example they are sometimes found on clocks and watches.
I believe it is almost universal now.
Because many peoples in many countries are not knowing Roman numerals, so we didn't use Roman everywhere.
A guy before me said "Rome". Rome, which nowadays is just a city, does not use Roman numerals. The correct answer is "none".
As all United States issued paper currency contains Roman numerals, and such currency is traded worldwide, it is safe to say that nearly all countries use Roman numerals. However, there are no countries or cultures alive today which use Roman numerals for counting or math on a day-to-day basis.
No, number symbols can vary around the world. While many countries use the Arabic numerals (0-9), some languages and cultures have their own unique number symbols derived from different historical systems, such as Chinese, Roman, or Devanagari numerals.
Started in ancient Rome, this unique numbering system is widely used in many countries in the present time. Then in the the 9th Century America started to use roman numerals.