by saphyra on March 7th, 2007

saphyra

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How do you write zero in roman numerals?

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  • by DavidHume on March 7th, 2007

    DavidHume

    You can't. Rather a major weakness in a number system, which is why we mostly use our Arabic numerals today.

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  • by branciforte3241 on April 3rd, 2007

    branciforte3241

    like this:

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  • by Im Alec has abandoned this account on March 7th, 2007

    Im Alec has abandoned this account

    You cannot, which was a major cause of the fall of the Roman Empire, since they were unable to indicate successful completion of their C programs.

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  • by Jay Was Here - AYPWIP on April 3rd, 2007

    Jay Was Here - AYPWIP

    The number zero did not have its own Roman numeral, but the concept of zero as a number was known by medieval computists. They included zero via the Latin word "nullus" meaning none. The first known computist to use zero was Dionysius Exiguus in 525. Only one instance of a Roman numeral for zero is known. About 725, The letter N, the initial of nullus, was used in a table all written in Roman numerals.

    So the answer could be "Nullus" or "N".

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  • by Tamilze on March 7th, 2007

    Tamilze

    The concept of the number zero didn't really exist until several hundred years later. It was just too hard to fathom nothingness back then. I actually know some people who don't understand how zero can be.

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  • by Constel on March 7th, 2007

    Constel

    like this '' ''

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  • by Tondoteottotote on April 3rd, 2007

    Tondoteottotote

    You don't, or you just use the 15th letter.

    PS: It's called "Roman Numerals," not "Roman Numbers."

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  • by Skip_2_My_Lou on March 7th, 2007

    Skip_2_My_Lou

    Like this:

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  • by themodelcitizen on April 3rd, 2007

    themodelcitizen

    LLC

  • by Anonymous on June 3rd, 2008

    Anonymous

    The romans knew and understood the fact that they needed to represent the number "zero". They did in fact do this by using the letter "N". This "N" stands for nullae which means "nothing" in latin.

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  • by Mirage V2.0 AWOL on April 3rd, 2007

    Mirage V2.0 AWOL

    (I-I)
    algebraically.

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