Present usage has trillion indicated by T (Tera) so it looks like a Roman numeral. Though this is only a modernization, as traditional Roman numerals only went up to a million, indicated with M with a bar over the top.
In Roman numerals, 1 trillion is represented as a combination of numerals. The Roman numeral for 1 is 'I,' and the Roman numeral for 1,000 is 'M.' Therefore, to represent 1 trillion in Roman numerals, you would write 'M' (1,000) followed by three sets of 'I' (1) to represent the three zeros in a trillion, resulting in 'MI.'
An M with 3 horizontal lines above it (for a US trillion = 10^12)
1 = I as a Roman numeral
It is the equivalent of 1/2+1/2 = 1 or I as a Roman numeral
The roman numeral 7 is represented as VII. The V is 5 and each I is a 1.
In Roman numerals, 1 trillion is represented as a combination of numerals. The Roman numeral for 1 is 'I,' and the Roman numeral for 1,000 is 'M.' Therefore, to represent 1 trillion in Roman numerals, you would write 'M' (1,000) followed by three sets of 'I' (1) to represent the three zeros in a trillion, resulting in 'MI.'
An M with 3 horizontal lines above it (for a US trillion = 10^12)
1 = I as a Roman numeral
It is the equivalent of 1/2+1/2 = 1 or I as a Roman numeral
The Roman numeral for 8 is VIII (5 + 1 + 1 + 1).
It is: 1 = I
The roman numeral 7 is represented as VII. The V is 5 and each I is a 1.
what is the roman numeral MDLXIX as a Hindu-Arabic numeral
It is the lower case for I = i but they both represent 1 as a Roman numeral
The Roman numeral of IL = -1+50 => 49
If you think to 1 (one) the Roman numeral is I.
Roman numeral converter: J=1 1 is j in roman numeral, its hard believe it but it is true