Roman Numerals |
Arabic Numerals |
does not exist |
0 |
I |
1 |
II |
2 |
III |
3 |
IV |
4 |
V |
5 |
VI |
6 |
VII |
7 |
VIII |
8 |
IX |
9 |
X |
10 |
XI |
11 |
XII |
12 |
XIII |
13 |
XIV |
14 |
XV |
15 |
XVI |
16 |
XVII |
17 |
XVIII |
18 |
XIX |
19 |
XX |
20 |
XXX |
30 |
XXXVI |
36 |
XL |
40 |
L |
50 |
LX |
60 |
LXX |
70 |
LXXX |
80 |
XC |
90 |
XCIX |
99 |
C |
100 |
CC |
200 |
CD |
400 |
D |
500 |
DCLXVI |
666 |
CM |
900 |
M |
1,000 |
MM |
2,000 |
MMCCCXXI |
2321 |
MMCDXLIX |
2449 |
MMM |
3,000 |
MV |
4,000 |
V |
5,000 |
X |
10,000 |
L |
50,000 |
C |
100,000 |
D |
500,000 |
M |
1,000,000 |
Source: Wikipedia
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*Erna Rubin was a very curious woman by nature and it was a pity that she did not know the Internet because she could had found it as a valuable tool of knowledge. In a thick notebook, that was found in her apartment after she passed away, she wrote to herself her own private encyclopedia. Erna collected various types of data, especially those that could be displayed in tables, concerning knowledge of the world and recorded them in her notebook. The data was compiled from a variety of resources – a minority was provided, on her request, by her son, Tzvi, but the majority was apparently gleaned from newspapers and magazines in German and Romanian, her son's school textbooks and student diaries and other sources.
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