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Romen Numeral Clocks
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Anyone will tell you that the Roman Numeral for 4 is IV... why then, does every clock I can find with Roman Numerals on it show 4 as IIII?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.No, firefly, 99 should not be "IC, not XCIX". Roman numerals are always translated one digit at a time, so 99 is 90+9 which is (100-10) plus (10-1) which is XC plus IX which is XCIX. I think the Romans did it deliberately to annoy and confuse people, a bit like Shakespeare deliberately torturing schoolchildren with his boring plays.
With regard to the "99" business, where a small Roman numeral is used before a larger one with the "less than" meaning, it is only used before numbers one or two steps up the ladder. So you can have I before V or X, but not before L or C, and X before L or C, but not before M. I'm indebted to one of my daughter's teachers for pointing this out, and I have no idea how the convention came about. Under that convention, however, IL and IC are simply not valid numbers, and we have to use XLIX and XCIX instead. Hmmm ... "Ten less than a hundred and one less than ten"? No wonder we prefer Arabic numerals!
The reason for this on clocks is simply one of balance; it looks better that way. The Romans themselves often used IIII for 4 too. It is often seen in inscriptions on monuments. However cynics may think that this is less to do with aesthetics than with ease of work. The stone mason carving a ' I ' has an easier task than he has carving a V and the chance of making an expensive error, perhaps ruining the slab of stone, was therefore less.
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