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Roman numerals
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===Standard form=== The following table displays how Roman numerals are usually written in modern times:<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Reddy |first1=Indra K. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=U3QY7gz0C2cC |title=Essential Math and Calculations for Pharmacy Technicians |last2=Khan |first2=Mansoor A. |date=2003 |publisher=CRC Press |isbn=978-0-203-49534-6 |page=3 |chapter=1 (Working with Arabic and Roman numerals) |quote="Table 1-1 Roman and Arabic numerals (table very similar to the table here, apart from inclusion of Vinculum notation."}}</ref><br> {| class="wikitable" |+ Individual decimal places |- ! !! Thousands !! Hundreds !! Tens !! Units |- | 1 || {{rn|M}} || {{rn|C}} || {{rn|X}} || {{rn|I}} |- | 2 || {{rn|MM}} || {{rn|CC}} || {{rn|XX}} || {{rn|II}} |- | 3 || {{rn|MMM}} || {{rn|CCC}} || {{rn|XXX}} || {{rn|III}} |- | 4 || || {{rn|CD}} || {{rn|XL}} || {{rn|IV}} |- | 5 || || {{rn|D}} || {{rn|L}} || {{rn|V}} |- | 6 || || {{rn|DC}} || {{rn|LX}} || {{rn|VI}} |- | 7 || || {{rn|DCC}} || {{rn|LXX}} || {{rn|VII}} |- | 8 || || {{rn|DCCC}} || {{rn|LXXX}} || {{rn|VIII}} |- | 9 || || {{rn|CM}} || {{rn|XC}} || {{rn|IX}} |} {{anchor|Subtractive notation<!--[[Sign-value notation]] links to this anchor; please update that article if this anchor is changed or deleted.-->}} The numerals for 4 ({{rn|IV}}) and 9 ({{rn|IX}}) are written using [[subtractive notation]],<ref name="deha1997">{{Cite book |last=Dehaene |first=Stanislas |title=The Number Sense : How the Mind Creates Mathematics |date=1997 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=9780199723096}} 288 pages.</ref> where the smaller symbol ({{rn|I}}) is ''subtracted'' from the larger one ({{rn|V}}, or {{rn|X}}), thus avoiding the clumsier {{rn|IIII}} and {{rn|VIIII}}.{{efn|Without theorising about causation, it may be noted that {{rn|IV}} and {{rn|IX}} not only have fewer characters than {{rn|IIII}} and {{rn|VIIII}}, but are less likely to be confused (especially at a quick glance) with {{rn|III}} and {{rn|VIII}}.}} Subtractive notation is also used for 40 ({{rn|XL}}), 90 ({{rn|XC}}), 400 ({{rn|CD}}) and 900 ({{rn|CM}}).<ref name="ema1990">{{Cite encyclopedia |title=Numbers, Representations of |encyclopedia=Encyclopaedia of Mathematics |publisher=Springer |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=kwMdtnhtUMMC&dq=%22Roman+numerals%22+additive&pg=PA502 |date=1990 |editor-last=Hazewinkel |editor-first=Michiel |volume=6 |page=502 |isbn=9781556080050}} 546 pages.</ref> These are the only subtractive forms in standard use. A number containing two or more decimal digits is built by appending the Roman numeral equivalent for each, from highest to lowest, as in the following examples: *   39 = {{rn|XXX}} + {{rn|IX}} = '''{{rn|XXXIX}}'''. *  246 = {{rn|CC}} + {{rn|XL}} + {{rn|VI}} = '''{{rn|CCXLVI}}'''. *  789 = {{rn|DCC}} + {{rn|LXXX}} + {{rn|IX}} = '''{{rn|DCCLXXXIX}}'''. * 2,421 = {{rn|MM}} + {{rn|CD}} + {{rn|XX}} + {{rn|I}} = '''{{rn|MMCDXXI}}'''. Any missing place (represented by a zero in the place-value equivalent) is omitted, as in Latin (and English) speech: *  160 = {{rn|C}} + {{rn|LX}} = '''{{rn|CLX}}''' *  207 = {{rn|CC}} + {{rn|VII}} = '''{{rn|CCVII}}''' * 1,009 = {{rn|M}} + {{rn|IX}} = '''{{rn|MIX}}''' * 1,066 = {{rn|M}} + {{rn|LX}} + {{rn|VI}} = '''{{rn|MLXVI}}'''<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Dela Cruz |first1=M. L. P. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PVK6lt2xXz4C |title=Number Smart Quest for Mastery: Teacher's Edition |last2=Torres |first2=H. D. |date=2009 |publisher=Rex Bookstore, Inc. |isbn=9789712352164}}</ref><ref name="martelli">{{Cite book |last1=Martelli |first1=Alex |url=https://archive.org/details/pythoncookbook00mart |title=Python Cookbook |last2=Ascher |first2=David |date=2002 |publisher=O'Reilly Media Inc. |isbn=978-0-596-00167-4 |url-access=registration}}</ref> The largest number that can be represented in this manner is 3,999 ('''{{rn|MMMCMXCIX}}'''), but this is sufficient for the values for which Roman numerals are commonly used today, such as year numbers: * 1776 = {{rn|M}} + {{rn|DCC}} + {{rn|LXX}} + {{rn|VI}} = '''{{rn|MDCCLXXVI}}''' (the date written on the book held by the [[Statue of Liberty]]). * 1918 = {{rn|M}} + {{rn|CM}} + {{rn|X}} + {{rn|VIII}} = '''{{rn|MCMXVIII}}''' (the first year of the [[Spanish flu]] pandemic) * 1944 = {{rn|M}} + {{rn|CM}} + {{rn|XL}} + {{rn|IV}} = '''{{rn|MCMXLIV}}''' (erroneous copyright notice of the 1954 movie ''[[The Last Time I Saw Paris#Copyright|The Last Time I Saw Paris]]'')<ref name="Hayes" /> * {{#time:Y}} = '''{{rn|{{#time:xrY}}}}''' (this year){{efn|This is the Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) year in which Wikipedia's cache of this page was last updated, so may be a few hours out of date.}} Prior to the introduction of Arabic numerals in the West, ancient and medieval users of Roman numerals used various means to write larger numbers {{xref|(see {{slink||Large numbers}} below)}}.
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