The Hindu-Arabic numbers are: 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9
The Roman numerals are: I, V, X, L, C, D and M
Hindu Arabic Numerals use numbers but Roman numerals use symbols.
In todays notation of Roman numerals it represents 1988 in Hindu-Arabic numerals
Roman numerals were the number system of the ancient Romans. Hindu-Arabic numerals are the digits we use for composing numbers nowadays.
The Roman numerals of MMDCCLXXII are equivalent to the Hindu-Arabic numerals of 2772
The Roman numerals of XXVIII are the equivalent of 28 in Hindu-Arabic numerals
Hindu Arabic Numerals use numbers but Roman numerals use symbols.
In todays notation of Roman numerals it represents 1988 in Hindu-Arabic numerals
Roman numerals were the number system of the ancient Romans. Hindu-Arabic numerals are the digits we use for composing numbers nowadays.
The Roman numerals of MMDCCLXXII are equivalent to the Hindu-Arabic numerals of 2772
In todays modern configuration of Roman numbers it is equivalent to 348 in Hindu-Arabic numerals
The Roman numerals of XXVIII are the equivalent of 28 in Hindu-Arabic numerals
dcccxiii in Roman numerals is equivalent to 813 in Hindu-Arabic numerals.
1 is similar betweeen Roman and Hindu arabic numerals
The Roman numerals LXVII=67 in Hindu Arabic numerals.
They can be in Roman numerals or in Hindu-Arabic numerals which are the numbers that we use today.
It is an invalid arrangement of Roman numerals and so therefore it has no equivalent in Hindu-Arabic numerals.
The Roman numerals of XX are the equivalent of 20 in Hindu-Arabic numerals