Roman numerals
Numbers in the Roman numeral system
Summary
Roman numerals are a numeral system that originated in ancient Rome and remained the usual way of writing numbers throughout Europe well into the Late Middle Ages. Like many other ancient numeral systems, Roman numerals are based on the additive principle: a number is written by concatenating individual symbols, each representing a fixed value, and the value of the resulting numeral phrase is the sum of the individual values of each letter. The modern style of Roman numerals uses only seven letters from the Latin alphabet as symbols: I meaning 1, V meaning 5, X meaning 10, L meaning 50, C meaning 100, D meaning 500, and M meaning 1000. For example, the Roman numeral XXVII represents the number 10 + 10 + 5 + 1 + 1 = 27. When a smaller numeral symbol precedes a larger one, subtraction is implied; for example, the notation IV represents 5 − 1 = 4 and IX represents 10 − 1 = 9.
Originally created by 24.4.254.xxx
10/22/2001, 12:49:31 AM
Modified
5/21/2026, 3:12:33 PM
Recent revisions
grammar
Still are
/* Modern use in European languages other than English */
link author: Michiel Hazewinkel (via [[WP:JWB]])
copy edit
/* Non-standard variants */ Performed minor cleanup.
consistent
expl. in first paragraph
/* Specific disciplines */rm idiosyncratic bullet, numbering → citing/chapter
/* Other */again
/* Non-standard variants */[[MOS:LISTGAP]]
/* Other additive forms */the Palace of Westminster clock tower has its own name. Also put quotation marks inside lang tags so they also get italics, and rm unnecessary extra tags
I think we should avoid the wording "can be read as": to me, it makes it sound there are people who say it aloud that way, like how some people are taught to read 0.014 aloud as "fourteen thousandths". But I don't think people actually say anything other than "four" and "nine".
more explicit about the subtractive notation
tighter