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6 answers

1 is I
2 is II
3 is III
4 is IV
5 is V
6 is VI
7 is VII
8 is VIII
9 is VX
10 is X
11 is XI

2007-02-27 01:13:41 · answer #1 · answered by PolytechnicStudent :] 3 · 0 0

To my knowledge, there is no distinction in Roman numerals between ordinal and cardinal numbers, so 1st, 2nd, 3rd are the same as 1, 2, 3.

2007-02-27 00:17:23 · answer #2 · answered by snowbaal 5 · 0 0

Roman numeral one: I
Roman numeral two: II
Roman numeral three: III

Basically, the first three numbers are just capitalized " i "s. For four and on:

Four: IV
Five: V
Six: VI
Seven: VII
Eight: VIII
Nine: IX
Ten: X

As you can see, " V " stands for five, and a single roman numeral behind it means to subtract one. So " IV " means four (5 - 1). From there, you can add three more single roman numberals until you reach nine, which then you use " X " , which means ten. A single numeral behind it means to subtract one, so IX means nine ( 10 - 1 ). I would recommend googling "roman numerals" if you want a further developed list.

2007-02-27 01:49:28 · answer #3 · answered by yuffleduffles 3 · 0 0

This may be what you are after....1st="I" 2nd="II" 3rd="III" Usually the roman numerals are from the alphabet we use today. The capital letter of "i" is used as one, two capitals is 2, and the number five is a "v". Four would be shown like this.."IV", and six is like this...."VI" Hope this gives you some help for your question.

2007-02-27 00:19:28 · answer #4 · answered by dragondave187 4 · 0 0

1= I
2= II
3= III
4= IV
5= V
6= VI
7= VII
8= VIII
9= IX
10= X
20= XX
30= XXX
40= XL
50= L
60= LX
70= LXX
80= LXXX
90= XC
100= C
1,000= M


hope that helps!

2007-02-27 05:43:13 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

use a capital "i", 1=I, 2=II, 3=III, 4 is different though if you need it, 4=IV

2007-02-27 00:19:09 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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