II.V times Xxii
120,000 in Roman numerals is written (CXX) which means 1,000 times 120 = 120,000
It is: (CCCL) which means 1,000 times 350 = 350,000
It is: (CCC) which means 1,000 times 300 = 300,000
To write 13000 in Roman numerals, you would use the numeral "X" for 10, followed by the numeral "M" for 1000 three times, resulting in "XXXM".
read and write
II.V times Xxii
Times New Roman, probably.
Sybil Ludington was most likely educated much the same as the other female children of the thirteen colonies. These children attended elementary schools or grammar schools. At these schools the children would learn to read, learn to write, and learn basic arithmetic.
120,000 in Roman numerals is written (CXX) which means 1,000 times 120 = 120,000
Check it out at http://www.chembakolli.com/ no; there is a school in the nearest town Gudalor! The schools are not as good as schools in the UK. Only a few children attend and they write on little blackboards. Some of the village children go to school. Their schools are in the open air and they have lessons sitting on the ground.
It is: (CCCL) which means 1,000 times 350 = 350,000
It is: (CCC) which means 1,000 times 300 = 300,000
In todays notation of Roman numerals: MMDXCIX But in the times of the Romans it probably was: IMMDC (2600-1)
Victorian slate boards were mostly used by children in schools. Children used slate boards to learn how to write and spell.
To write 13000 in Roman numerals, you would use the numeral "X" for 10, followed by the numeral "M" for 1000 three times, resulting in "XXXM".
No, Roman children did not have pencils. Pencils, as we know them today, were not invented until much later. In ancient Rome, children would use a stylus made of a thin metal or bone to write on wax tablets.