It still is, on clocks and for dates.
Roman numerals are used as numbers. For example, the roman numeral for the number one is an I. The system can be used for any number.
The Roman numeral system is used in the Latin language which is still spoken today in the Vatican
it is a number system used long ago by the Aztecs
The Roman numeral system is still being used today because it is the numerical aspect of the Latin language which is still being used today.
If the Roman had used the same numbers which are used in the Arabic number system then they would have been using the Arabic number system. The whole point is that they used a different system. The other half of the whole point is that the Roman empire fell before the Arabs and Hindus developed their number system. The Romans 'borrowed' their system from the Etruscans; they could not borrow what had not yet been invented.
No, they are not.
The number system used by the Greeks in the first millennium was called Aegan System. Attic Numerals was later formed on which the Roman System was built. The Attic Numerals used the first letter the name of the number the represented.
The Roman numeral system was used during ancient Roman times, but use of the system continued long after the Roman empire declined. In the 14th century, Roman numerals were slowly replaced by Hindu-Arabic numbers.
One of them is the Hindu-Arabic numeral system which we use today and another is the Roman numeral system which was used by the ancient Romans
One of them is the Hindu-Arabic numeral system which we use today and another is the Roman numeral system which was used by the ancient Romans
The Roman numeral system was first used by the Etruscans who once ruled the Romans.
The Roman numerals was the numerical system used in Ancient Rome and used a combination of letters, for example the Roman numeral VII would represent the numbers 5 and 1 and 1, adding the total of the numerals VII would represent the number seven.