-
- [Instructor] If I'm a child,
-
and if I wanted to
represent one of something,
-
I might just write, hey, one of that.
-
Like one stick or one twig.
-
And then if I wanted two,
-
I might just write two
twigs, right, one plus one.
-
Three, three twigs.
-
One next to another.
-
I just write them and say what I have
-
is just one plus one plus one, three.
-
And this is called additive
way of writing things.
-
I just add what's there individually
-
because I know this I-like
thing stands for one.
-
And then I add I, I, I, three
Is, which is just three.
-
So Roman numerals follows this idea
-
of additive representation of numbers.
-
So I'm gonna look at one, and what is one?
-
I'll go here, I'll look at my table.
-
Oh, one, I write one as I.
-
And so it's just I.
-
And then two is, I need two ones,
-
and I just have to write them
next to each, so it's II.
-
And three is going to
be, that's right, III.
-
Four is going to be IIII.
-
Not really. (chuckles)
-
So it seems right, right, to do this.
-
Write three Is for
three, four Is for four.
-
But then it turns out that
this is not how we do it,
-
at least not anymore.
-
So I'm gonna put four as controversial.
-
We're gonna talk about four more.
-
So after this, what about five?
-
I'm gonna up here.
-
I can maybe put IIIII.
-
But then, what's going on?
-
It's already becoming hard to read.
-
And we've already made up
a new alphabet for five.
-
So I'll be putting five
just because that's easier.
-
Now, what should I do for six?
-
It gets interesting for six
-
because how do I write six?
-
So when I look at six,
I'll go up here and ask,
-
"What is the largest thing that I have
-
"that's smaller than six?"
-
So six lies between five and 10.
-
So I know that I can write
six as five plus something.
-
So I'll first write my five, which is V.
-
And then ask, "Okay,
what is remaining here?"
-
There's just one remaining.
-
And one, I know how I can write it.
-
I'll just go write the one.
-
And the same thing happens
for seven, five plus two.
-
Eight is five plus three.
-
Nine, again, I'm gonna
put a question mark here
-
because it's a different way of writing.
-
We do not write VIIII with the four Is.
-
Right, it becomes very long.
-
So I'm gonna put a question mark here.
-
I'm gonna learn how
we're gonna write this.
-
And for 10, I'm gonna go up here.
-
It's exactly, I already
have an alphabet for it,
-
so I'm just gonna use that.
-
So let's look at an example.
-
If I had 23 with me, and
if I want to write 23,
-
how should I think about it?
-
So in my head, I'm going,
"Okay, 23 is more than 10.
-
"It's less than 50.
-
"So I should write it as sum times 10,
-
"and then I'll see what happens."
-
So how many 10s are there?
-
And I see that there are two 10s.
-
So I'm gonna write two 10s.
-
Maybe I should use a different color.
-
So two 10s, XX.
-
Is that enough?
-
No, now what I have is 20.
-
So I've taken 23, and I've made it,
-
imagined it to be 20 plus three.
-
20 plus three.
-
And this 20 has already
been written over here.
-
So now what about this three?
-
I treat this as a fresh problem,
-
as if I'm starting all over again.
-
I'll ask, "Three, where is three between?"
-
It's between one and five.
-
I already know how to write
that, how to write three.
-
So I just go up here and write
three as one, two, three.
-
So XXIII will give me 23.
-
And as you can see,
-
if I had been given this number
-
and asked, "What is this number?"
how would I have read it?
-
I'll have read it by
going X is 10, X is 10.
-
So 10 plus 10 is 20.
-
I is one, III is three.
-
So this is 20, this is three.
-
So 20 plus three is 23.
-
So that's exactly the backward process
-
that I would have used.
-
And you can see that in all these cases
-
the bigger number is what we write first
-
and then the smaller numbers.
-
So XX comes and then II.
-
Over here we can see that V
comes first and then the I.
-
So whenever we're writing usual numbers
-
it comes in this format,
-
the bigger one first and
then the smaller ones.
-
But if you see, in our unique as well.
-
So we said these two are
controversial, right.
-
Four and nine.
-
So what is it about four and nine?
-
How do we write four and nine?
-
So instead of thinking
of four as four ones
-
where we write IIII.
-
Which in fact, people used to
do back in the Roman times,
-
and then they stopped doing it
-
because it just took too much space.
-
And in important documents
where there's not much space,
-
we want a shorter way to write four.
-
So what is a shorter way to write four?
-
They thought of four as,
-
"Hey, I can write it
was one less than five."
-
So I can put an I, and then
I can write a V after that.
-
So this is the first time
you're seeing a smaller number
-
come before a larger number.
-
So they said, "Whenever
you see this happening,
-
"think of it as not one
plus five equal to six.
-
"Don't do that.
-
"But think of it as five
minus one, which is four."
-
The same thing goes for nine.
-
Think of it as one minus 10.
-
Actually, 10 minus one, or
one less than 10 for nine.
-
So we had an IV for four and IX for nine.
-
And when we do this,
-
this is called the subtractive notation.
-
I'm gonna write it here as subtractive.
-
Now this name is not that important,
-
it's just for you to realize
that when we're writing it here
-
in this way, we're actually
using a subtraction.
-
Five minus one and 10 minus one.
-
Now, the most important thing to know
-
about this subtractive notation
is that it's super rare.
-
It very, very rarely happens.
-
So I'm gonna fill in for
four and nine over here.
-
And then let's look at where
-
the subtractive notation is used.
-
So four is IV, and nine is IX.
-
So where is the subtractive notation used?
-
So you can see that it's
used very, very, very rarely.
-
In fact, the only special
cases are four and nine.
-
You're asking me,
-
"Don't we use this kind
of thing anywhere else?"
-
We do.
-
But just for the multiples
of four and nine.
-
Four and nine, 40, 90, 400, 900.
-
Only for these numbers do you
use this subtractive notation.
-
And in fact, you can forget 400 and 900,
-
they're two big numbers.
-
We can just take the
four, nine, 40, and 90.
-
So four, you know how to write it, IV.
-
Nine, you'll write it as IX.
-
What about 40 right now?
-
So instead of thinking of 40
as four 10s and writing XXXX,
-
what we do is that we
look at 40 as N minus 50.
-
So what must I do then?
-
And I'm again saying 10 minus 50,
-
what I really mean is 50
minus 10. (chuckling softly)
-
I should stop doing this.
-
So 10 less than 50.
-
So 10 less than 50, 50 is L.
-
So I'll write XL.
-
I want you to stop and
think about how to do 90.
-
And when you try that, and
once you get the answer,
-
look at what I'm doing.
-
So how do you do 90?
-
You will look at this number, 100,
-
and then subtract N from it.
-
So 10 less than 100, that's 90.