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it is the first hindu arabic chinese empire
Danica Denise L. Enciso
Greek numbers were first used about 3,000 years ago in ancient Greece. The Greek numeral system, also known as Attic numerals, was developed during this time and was in use until the adoption of the Hindu-Arabic numeral system in the late Middle Ages.
MDCCCLXXIX which would be 5936Improved Answer:-The first given answer above is wrong because in todays modern notation of Roman numerals it is the equivalent of 1879 in Hindu-Arabic numerals.
you have to first use a ruler
In medieval Western Europe the numeracy system was Roman then in the Middle Ages the Hindu-Arabic numeracy system was introduced.
The Hindu-Arabic numeral system originated in India and was based on the Brahmi numerals that can be traced back to Budhist inscriptions from the 3rd century BCE. However, it wasn't until the 9th Century CE that the digit 0 was first seen. The system was base-9 until that time, but was nonetheless positional, using spaces to indicate no value.
India. The Western Arabs brought it to Europe, but the system itself was developed in India.
Whitlam became the twenth-first Prime Minister of Australia on 5 December 1972.
First off, CDLXVII is not Arabic. It is Roman Numerals. Secondly, the so called "English numbers" are actually the Arabic ones. They are known as Hindu-Arabic Numerals. And finally, to answer your question, it would be 467. Source: Took college level Algebra where we learned the different counting methods (such as Egyptian, Mayan, Babylonian, Greek, Roman, Hindu-Arabic (English), and Chinese (which is similar to Japanese). Passed with a 94.
First, we'll have to decipher the meaning of twenth. My best guess is twentieth, but I don't know how many twentieths you wish to convert. 1 and 1/20 = 1.05 1 and 2/20 = 1.1 1 and 3/20 = 1.5
Roman numerals were common up until the 14th century. However, the Hindu-Arabic system, which replaced it, was first introduced in the 10th century, and was derived from the Indian numeral system first used in the 5th century. The Roman system started in around 400 BC but the system we use today didn't arrive until the 1st century AD (albeit without subtractive notation such as IV). There have been other numeral systems, including positional notation systems, that pre-date the Romans, as far back as 1,500 BC.