The numeral for 4 is often written as IIII on clocks although it is generally written as IV, but both are correct.
No, the Roman numeral for 4 is IV, not llll. The use of llll is a common mistake, but traditional Roman numeral representations on clocks and other time-related devices use IV instead of llll for the numeral 4.
the roman numerals was made because to reprent stuff like people names and clocks
It is not backwards when the hands of the clock points towards it.
IIII isn't the technical one but it's what most clocks use. the real one is IV
Generally the Roman numeral IV represents the number 4 but on some old watches and sun dials 4 is represented by the numeral IIII. The numeral IIII was correct when it was written but convention now decrees that a numeral should not be repeated more than three times. According to this rule IIII should no longer be used.
Clocks or descendents.
No, the Roman numeral for 4 is IV, not llll. The use of llll is a common mistake, but traditional Roman numeral representations on clocks and other time-related devices use IV instead of llll for the numeral 4.
For instance on clocks and watches.
the roman numerals was made because to reprent stuff like people names and clocks
IIII isn't the technical one but it's what most clocks use. the real one is IV
It is not backwards when the hands of the clock points towards it.
Roman numerals! we use roman numeral clocks...etc. hope that helped!!
Generally the Roman numeral IV represents the number 4 but on some old watches and sun dials 4 is represented by the numeral IIII. The numeral IIII was correct when it was written but convention now decrees that a numeral should not be repeated more than three times. According to this rule IIII should no longer be used.
Some Roman numeral clocks use IIII to represent 4, which is how most Romans would have written it. However, in order to comply with the rule that no numeral should be writen more than three times in succession the number 4 is now more correctly written as IV.
It is 4 because the ancient Romans always wrote out the equivalent 4 as IIII instead of IV for fear of offending their main god who was known as Jupiter.
IV as in 1 less than 5 However on clocks 4 is also seen as IIII
on clocks,roman time, and walls on clocks,roman time, and walls on clocks,roman time, and walls