Yes, Chinese people use the Arabic numerals, and Chinese has their own numbers writing in Chinese!
Chinese numeral characters, which are part of the written Chinese language, are still in use. Arabic numerals are also widely used in China.
There was no zero in ancient Chinese numerals. The ancient Chinese number system was not a positional system, so there was no need for a zero.
It is 零 or 〇.
yes it is spoken as ling and written as 零 although arabic numerals are also used in China.
Most Chinese numerals of later period were descendants from Shang dynasty oracle numerals of 14th century B.C. The oracle bone script numerals were found on tortoise shell and animal bones.
Arabic numerals were first used, as far as is known, about 600 AD. They were used in the Chinese Ming Dynasty in the 14th century also.
Taiwan and China do, although the usage there is diminishing in favour of Indian numerals (0123456789)
The Romans used a mathematical system based on numerals.
The number 20 is commonly just written using Arabic numerals (20) in Japanese, but the Chinese numerals may also be used (二十). Both ways are pronounced as 'nijuu' (rough pronunciation: "knee-jew").
The Japanese use the Arabic numerals as well as the Chinese numerals. In the vertical written pages it's usually Chinese numerals ( in novels etc ), the order is top to bottom, and since they are decimal numerals, have the same meaning , ie, 100's 10's 1's. In most contemporary usage, Arabic numerals are used, in which case it has the same order rules as in North America. ( left to right, 100's 10's 1's etc ) Some mixed uses appear, such as in restaurants where Arabic numerals are written top to bottom to indicate prices
Roman numerals were used for writing numbers in ancient rome.