1 unus 2 duo 3 tres 4 quattour 5 quinque 6 sex 7 septem 8 octo 9 novem 10 decem 11 undecim 12 duodecim 13 tredecim 14 quattourdecim 15 quindecim 16 sedecim 17 septendecim 18 duodeviginti 19 undeviginti 20 viginti
Sure. Why not? The Latin letters are the same as the English and the numbers or numerals are really quite simple once you get over their initial "awkwardness".
Count numbers
Latin is the primary basis for most western European languages including spanish, french and italian. Latin numbers were the roman numerals and though not used everyday are still used in some cases.
The only site I could find with audio files pronouncing Latin numbers is at: http://www.archive.org/details/LatinPracticeOrdinals
The English names for large numbers are come from the Latin names for small numbers n by adding the ending -llionsuggested by the name "million."mi-llion MillionBi-llion BillionTri-illio TrillionSo MILLION is Latin.
The Latin letters and the Arabic numbers. There are 23 Latin letters, or 62: A-Z. 62 if it is case-sensitive. There are ten Arabic numbers: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 and 0.
The Latin letters and the Arabic numbers. There are 23 Latin letters, or 62: A-Z. 62 if it is case-sensitive. There are ten Arabic numbers: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 and 0.
these numbers came from the Greeks chanting which turned into Latin and then turned into numbers
Vires in Numeris
1990 and 51.7%
poor
Numerically means in numbers. It comes from numerus, the Latin for number.