Roman Numerals Guide

Reading and Writing I, V, X, L, C, D, M

Learn Roman Numerals

Roman numerals have endured for over two millennia—still appearing on clock faces, movie credits, book chapters, and Super Bowl logos. Understanding this ancient system connects us to Roman civilization and remains practically useful today.

Basic Rules

Rule 1: Addition

When a smaller value follows a larger value, add them:

  • VI = 5 + 1 = 6
  • XV = 10 + 5 = 15
  • LXI = 50 + 10 + 1 = 61

Rule 2: Subtraction

When a smaller value precedes a larger value, subtract:

  • IV = 5 - 1 = 4
  • IX = 10 - 1 = 9
  • XL = 50 - 10 = 40
  • XC = 100 - 10 = 90
  • CD = 500 - 100 = 400
  • CM = 1000 - 100 = 900

Rule 3: Repetition

A symbol can be repeated up to three times:

  • II = 2, III = 3
  • XX = 20, XXX = 30
  • IIII is invalid (use IV)

Reading Roman Numerals

Strategy

  1. Scan from left to right
  2. Look for subtraction pairs (IV, IX, XL, XC, CD, CM)
  3. Add up all values

Example: MCMXCIV

  • M = 1000
  • CM = 900 (1000 - 100)
  • XC = 90 (100 - 10)
  • IV = 4 (5 - 1)
  • Total = 1000 + 900 + 90 + 4 = 1994

Writing Roman Numerals

Strategy

  1. Break the number into place values
  2. Convert each place value
  3. Combine from largest to smallest

Example: Write 2749

  • 2000 = MM
  • 700 = DCC
  • 40 = XL
  • 9 = IX
  • Result: MMDCCXLIX

Reference Table

Value123456789
1sIIIIIIIVVVIVIIVIIIIX
10sXXXXXXXLLLXLXXLXXXXC
100sCCCCCCCDDDCDCCDCCCCM
1000sMMMMMM

Special Cases and Limits

Numbers Beyond 3999

Standard Roman numerals only go to 3999 (MMMCMXCIX).

For larger numbers, Romans sometimes used:

  • Bars over letters (×1000): V̅ = 5000
  • Brackets: |V| = 5000
  • Multiple Ms: MMMM... (non-standard)

Zero

Roman numerals have no zero. The concept didn't exist in that form for Romans.

Fractions

Romans used a separate system based on twelfths (as in inches to a foot), but these are rarely seen today.

Modern Uses of Roman Numerals

Common Applications

  • Clocks: Traditional clock faces (IIII often used instead of IV)
  • Movie dates: Copyright years (© MMXXIV)
  • Outlines: I, II, III for major sections
  • Book chapters: Chapter IX
  • Monarchs/Popes: Henry VIII, John Paul II
  • Super Bowls: Super Bowl LVIII
  • Olympics: Games of the XXX Olympiad

Why IIII on Clocks?

Many theories exist:

  • Visual balance with VIII opposite
  • Easier to cast in metal
  • Historical convention

Common Roman Numerals List

NumberRomanNumberRoman
1I20XX
2II30XXX
3III40XL
4IV50L
5V100C
6VI500D
7VII1000M
8VIII1500MD
9IX2000MM
10X3000MMM

Why Roman Numerals Aren't Used for Math

Roman numerals lack features needed for arithmetic:

  • No zero: Can't represent nothing or use as placeholder
  • No place value: Position doesn't determine value (mostly)
  • Addition is awkward: XLVII + XXIX = ?
  • Multiplication is very hard: Try XLII × XVII

The Hindu-Arabic system (0-9) replaced Roman numerals for calculation because it makes arithmetic so much easier.

Conclusion

Roman numerals use seven basic symbols (I, V, X, L, C, D, M) combined through addition and subtraction rules. While impractical for calculation, they remain culturally important and appear regularly in formal contexts—from movie credits to monarchs' names. Knowing how to read MCMXCIV as 1994 or write 2024 as MMXXIV connects us to two thousand years of Western history.

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Roman Numerals Guide: Reading and Writing | YounitConverter