Roman numerals weren't even used outside Europe so I hardly consider them being used in "everyday life" of the average human. Roman numerals used a primitive and inconvenient system which was easily replaced by the Hindu-Arabic numerals that are now standard in the modern world.
You type roman numerals by using capital letters.
A) Arabic numerals are in numbers whereas Roman numerals are in letters.B) Even if Roman numerals are in letters the symbols are easier to understand, despite the fact that Australians and Americans and most probably you write numbers using the system of Arabic numerals.C) The system of Roman numerals was invented before the system of Arabic numerals, but people use the system of Arabic numerals to write more frequently.
If you mean in Roman numerals then: 753 = DCCLIII
Spend a day using only roman numerals instead of Arabic numerals. The disadvantages will become painfully obvious.
Not really, since roman numerals don't have units smaller then one.
We started Roman Numerals in about the year of 1389 AD I think.
The number 947 in Roman numerals would be CMXLVII
You type roman numerals by using capital letters.
Convert from Roman numerals to Arabic numerals, add, convert back to Roman numerals.
A) Arabic numerals are in numbers whereas Roman numerals are in letters.B) Even if Roman numerals are in letters the symbols are easier to understand, despite the fact that Australians and Americans and most probably you write numbers using the system of Arabic numerals.C) The system of Roman numerals was invented before the system of Arabic numerals, but people use the system of Arabic numerals to write more frequently.
The answer depends on how many more millennia they keep using Roman numerals!
You cannot write fractions using Roman numerals.
If you mean in Roman numerals then: 753 = DCCLIII
Spend a day using only roman numerals instead of Arabic numerals. The disadvantages will become painfully obvious.
Not really, since roman numerals don't have units smaller then one.
xviii
DCXXIX