Greek numerals are a system of representing numbers using the letters of the Greek alphabet. They are also known as Milesian numerals, Alexandrian numerals, or alphabetic numerals. In modern Greece, they are still in use for ordinal numbers.
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lxii
The above is 62 in Latin numerals.
62 in Greek numerals is ξβ' or (in capital form) ΞΒ'
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NO such numerals. However, if you mean ROMAN Numerals then
2004 = MMIV
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Tradition, and also because Roman numerals are more recognisable than ancient Greek numerals.
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In ancient Greek numerals, 65 is written as "ΞΕʹ" which represents 60 (Ξ) plus 5 (Ε). The Greek numeral system is based on adding up the values of individual letters to represent different numbers, similar to Roman numerals.
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No Greek Acrophonic numbers do not have place value as they are not a positional system.
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No, the Ancient Greek number system did not use zero as a place value, or number for that matter.
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I believe that the ancient Greeks used them for mathematics!
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Delta is the fourth letter of the Greek alphabet. In the system of Greek numerals it has a value of 4. Letters that arose from Delta include the Latin D.
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Nu/njuː/ (uppercase Νlowercase ν, also transcribed Ny; modern Greek: Νι [ni] Ni), is the 13th letter of the Greek alphabet. In the system of Greek numerals it has a value of 50.
sorce:wikipedia
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When they first needed to record tallies and numbers. There is no exact date when this was. However, like many other numbering systems of the period, the system evolved from existing systems, most notably the Etruscan numerals which were themselves evolved from the Greek Attic numerals.
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B isn't a number, so asking what it looks like "in Roman numerals" is nonsense.
In the Greek numbering system, the letter beta represents the number 2.
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Delta is the fourth letter of the Greek alphabet. In the system of Greek numerals it has a value of 4. Letters that arose from Delta include the Latin D.
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In Greek numerals its ρ
upper case P
The word is εκατό (ekato) e as in exit.
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Yes, they do. Because, technically, the Greek originated from Rome, Italy. So, most parts of Italy do.
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Greek numerals are a system of representing numbers using the letters of the Greek alphabet. The first Greek number system we examine is their acrophonic system which was use in the first millennium BC. 'Acrophonic' means that the symbols for the numerals come from the first letter of the number name, so the symbol has come from an abreviation of the word which is used for the number. Here are the symbols for the numbers 5, 10, 100, 1000, 10000. No one has claimed to be the author.
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Roman numerals are called so because they were used by the ancient Romans as their numbering system. The Romans adapted and modified the Etruscan numerals, which in turn were derived from the ancient Greek numeral system. The use of these numerals continued throughout the Roman Empire and have since become a widely recognized system for representing numbers in various contexts.
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Zeta is the sixth letter of the Greek alphabet and has a value of 7 in the Greek numerals system. The names of the letter Z in the UK "Zed" and "Zee" both derive from the word Zeta.
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its called roman numerals and it would be said VII because V=5 and II=2
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When the middle ages began, people in the West were using Roman numerals, and those in the East were using the vaguely similar Greek numerals. Arabic numerals were introduced through Spain in the eleventh Century and had sufficiently great advantage that many people had switched by the end of the thirteenth century.
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The number system used by the Greeks in the first millennium was called Aegan System. Attic Numerals was later formed on which the Roman System was built. The Attic Numerals used the first letter the name of the number the represented.
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The numerals that most Americans use are the Indian numerals or the Arabian numerals
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Roman numerals were inspired by Etruscan numerals of which Roman numerals originated from.
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Roman numerals originated in ancient Rome during the 3rd century BC. They were derived from the Etruscan numeral system, which in turn had influences from ancient Greek numerals. The system uses a combination of seven basic symbols (I, V, X, L, C, D, and M) to represent numbers.
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It depends on what kind of numerals you are talking about:
In Arabic numerals, it is 1000.
In Roman numerals, it is M.
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No.
The Romans used letters to represent quantities.
Whereas the Greeks used letters and symbols to represent quantities.
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The modern western alphabet is based on Classical Greek and Roman letters.
The first two letters of the Classical Greek alphabet are 'Alpha(A)' and 'Beta(B)' . By ligating these two words we have the word 'Alphabet'.
Alpha Beta = Alphabet(a).
Roman numerals are selected letters from the alphabet in order to represent numbers.
M (Mille)= 1000
D = 500
C (Centum) = 100
L = 50
X = 10
V = 5
I (Capital letter 'I') = 1.
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There are Roman numerals, but the Greek numbers are the same as the Arabic, i.e.: 1 2 3 4 etc.
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The ancient greek numerals are :
α,β,γ,δ,ε,στ,ζ,η,θ is 1...9
ι,κ,λ,μ,ν,ξ,ο,π,ϟ is 10...90
ρ,σ,τ,υ,φ,χ,ψ,ω,ϡ is 100...900
for a thousand the used an '','' before the letter. So 1000 was ,α.
2000 was ,β etc.
So 1341 was ,ατμα
2080 was ,βπ
104 was ρδ etc.
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There are many but roman numerals refer tohindu arrabic numerals
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'Numerals???' Are we talking of Roman Numerals.
In which case 23 = XXIII
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dcccxiii in Roman numerals is equivalent to 813 in Hindu-Arabic numerals.
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The Roman numerals of XXVIII are the equivalent of 28 in Hindu-Arabic numerals
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Those are Roman numerals. In Arabic numerals it is 1697.
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It is already in numerals but if you mean in Roman numerals then its equivalent is MDCCII
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Eleven in Roman numerals is XI.
Eleven in Roman numerals is XI.
Eleven in Roman numerals is XI.
Eleven in Roman numerals is XI.
Eleven in Roman numerals is XI.
Eleven in Roman numerals is XI.
Eleven in Roman numerals is XI.
Eleven in Roman numerals is XI.
Eleven in Roman numerals is XI.
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The Roman system of numbering came into common use in the 4th century BC. Before that, they used the Greek system of numbers.
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