Unfortunately your question isn't possible. You have asked to spell the word open using numbers. The word "OPEN" in the Roman alphabet is basically "OPEN" by English lettering with some variations to the actual letters. Here is an image with the alphabet letters. http://atschool.eduweb.co.uk/nettsch/time/alph.gif
Yes, Roman numerals is a compound noun, an open spaced compound noun; a word made up of the adjective 'Roman' and the noun 'numerals' to form a noun with its own meaning. The adjective 'Roman' is a proper adjective and must be capitalized.
The equivalent of 2013 in Roman numerals is MMXIII
The five letter word MIMIC can be formed from Roman numerals but as the individual numerals are in the wrong order it isn't a real Roman numeral.
The letter "M" stands for 1,000 in Roman numerals.
Today the equivalent of 19 in Roman numerals are XIX But in ancient Rome they once were XVIIII or IXX In fact the Latin word for XVIIII is 'novemdecim' and the Latin word for IXX is 'undeviginti There is no equivalent Latin word for XIX
Yes, Roman numerals is a compound noun, an open spaced compound noun; a word made up of the adjective 'Roman' and the noun 'numerals' to form a noun with its own meaning. The adjective 'Roman' is a proper adjective and must be capitalized.
Roman numerals were a system of writing numbers, not words.
The equivalent of 2013 in Roman numerals is MMXIII
The five letter word MIMIC can be formed from Roman numerals but as the individual numerals are in the wrong order it isn't a real Roman numeral.
The letter "M" stands for 1,000 in Roman numerals.
90 in Roman numerals is XC.
The Roman numeral for thousands is M. For example, 2,000 in Roman numerals is written as MM.
Today the equivalent of 19 in Roman numerals are XIX But in ancient Rome they once were XVIIII or IXX In fact the Latin word for XVIIII is 'novemdecim' and the Latin word for IXX is 'undeviginti There is no equivalent Latin word for XIX
MIX
Type them
yes
CCXXXI