It could be trying to show a date. In this case 7-7-2007, or July 7, 2007.
The Roman numeral "vii vii mm vii" translates to 7007 in standard decimal notation.
II-VII-MM
Roman numerals are only used to represent years, but June would be the 6th month so VI 7TH would be VII and 2000 is MM so VI/VII/MM but this would never be used.
I-VII-MMXI or VII-1-MMXI depending on which date format you use (DD-MM-YYYY or MM-DD-YYYY)
If you mean as in Roman numerals then MM is equivalent to 2000
7-13-2000 = VII-XIII-MM
II-VII-MM
It is: VII-IX-MM
Roman numerals are only used to represent years, but June would be the 6th month so VI 7TH would be VII and 2000 is MM so VI/VII/MM but this would never be used.
I-VII-MMXI or VII-1-MMXI depending on which date format you use (DD-MM-YYYY or MM-DD-YYYY)
If you mean as in Roman numerals then MM is equivalent to 2000
7-13-2000 = VII-XIII-MM
2000 in Roman numerals is MM.
It means: MM = 1000+1000 => 2000
IV-VII-MM
IV VII MM Expressed in same format as question (day, month, year).
Do you mean: 10-08-2000 if so it is X-VIII-MM
MM or mm are Roman numerals equivalent to 2000