Roman numeral IX is 9, so six would be VI, IIIIX or IVX.
Add something to NINE to make it SIX IX is a Roman Numeral for 9 Add/ Prefix S to it to make it SIX
6, V=5 and I=1, with the I coming after the V it means to add them. IV would be 4.
The number 6 is represented by the Roman numeral VI (V = 5 + I =1).Five is represented by V and you need to add one or the I. So six would be shown as VI.
XVI. X is 10, V is five, and I is one. add them together and your answer is 16 =)
Add -3 to 9 because 9+(-3) = 6 Alternatively add s to the Roman numeral of ix which is 9 which then becomes six.
Add something to NINE to make it SIX IX is a Roman Numeral for 9 Add/ Prefix S to it to make it SIX
Add something to NINE to make it SIX IX is a Roman Numeral for 9 Add/ Prefix S to it to make it SIX
6, V=5 and I=1, with the I coming after the V it means to add them. IV would be 4.
Add something to NINE to make it SIX IX is a Roman Numeral for 9 Add/ Prefix S to it to make it SIX
The number 6 is represented by the Roman numeral VI (V = 5 + I =1).Five is represented by V and you need to add one or the I. So six would be shown as VI.
XVI. X is 10, V is five, and I is one. add them together and your answer is 16 =)
Add -3 to 9 because 9+(-3) = 6 Alternatively add s to the Roman numeral of ix which is 9 which then becomes six.
That is not a valid Roman numeral. - L stands for 50. Normally you would add the two Ls together to get 100; however, 100 is represented by the letter C. LLX is not a valid Roman numeral. If you want to represent 110, use CX.
The Roman numeral XXXII represents the number 32, while LV represents the number 55. When you add these together, you get 87, which would be represented in Roman numerals as LXXXVII.
The roman numeral for 2014 is: MMXIV. M = 1000 M = 1000 X = 10 IV = 4 Add them together and you come to 2014.
there is no roman numeral for itAnother answer: The Romans had no numeral to represent zero because there was no need for a zero in their system. We have 9 numbers plus the zero symbol. We add a zero on to the end of a number to convert it to tens and two zeros to convert it to hundreds and so on. The Romans simply had different symbols for tens and hundreds. For example we would write 1, 10, 20, 40, 50, 100 and 200 but the same numbers as Roman numerals would be I, X, XX, XL, L, C and CC, done quite simply with no need for a zero. In the middle ages monks, who still used Roman numerals and wrote in Latin, began to used the symbol N to represent zero (from the Latin Nullae meaning nothing).
The given numerals are invalid because the Roman numeral system does not contain a zero symbol but if you mean MDCCVI then it is equivalent to 1706