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Roman Numerals Ⅳ Copy & Paste

Complete Roman numeral symbols from Ⅰ to Ⅿ in uppercase and lowercase. Click to copy!

All Roman Numerals

Click any numeral to copy instantly

Roman Numeral Packs

Organized collections

+2

Uppercase Ⅰ-Ⅻ

12 items

+2

Lowercase ⅰ-ⅻ

12 items

Large Values

4 items

Roman numerals are one of the oldest and most recognizable numbering systems still in active use today. Originating in ancient Rome, these symbols combine letters to represent values and continue to appear in clock faces, book chapters, movie sequels, building cornerstones, academic outlines, and formal document numbering. Their enduring presence in modern design, architecture, and media makes them a timeless choice for adding elegance and authority to any text.

Our collection provides the full set of Unicode Roman numeral characters in three practical groups. The uppercase set includes Ⅰ through Ⅻ (1 to 12), which are the numerals most commonly seen on clock dials, watch faces, and chapter headings. These single-character glyphs are distinct from typing regular Latin letters like I, V, or X because they are dedicated Unicode codepoints designed to render at consistent widths and proper proportions. The lowercase Roman numerals ⅰ through ⅻ serve academic and publishing conventions, such as numbering preface pages, front matter sections, footnotes, and sub-items within hierarchical outlines. Finally, the large-value numerals Ⅼ (50), Ⅽ (100), Ⅾ (500), and Ⅿ (1000) allow you to express higher numbers and historical dates.

Because these are genuine Unicode characters, they behave as single glyphs rather than sequences of Latin letters. This means they maintain correct spacing and alignment in any font that supports them. You can paste them into social media bios, document titles, presentation slides, usernames, spreadsheet headers, and creative projects. Simply click any numeral on this page to copy it to your clipboard and paste it wherever a touch of classical style is needed.

How to Use Roman Numerals

1

Click

Click any Roman numeral to copy

2

Paste

Ctrl+V (Win) or Cmd+V (Mac)

3

Use

In outlines, titles, clocks, or designs

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Unicode Roman numerals (Ⅰ Ⅱ Ⅲ) are single characters with proper proportional spacing. Typing regular letters (I, V, X) can cause inconsistent widths and kerning issues. The dedicated Unicode glyphs also allow software to recognize them as numbers.

The basic values are I=1, V=5, X=10, L=50, C=100, D=500, M=1000. Add values left to right (VI=6), but subtract when a smaller value precedes a larger one (IV=4, IX=9, XL=40, XC=90).

Roman numerals appear on clock and watch faces, in book and movie titles (Star Wars Episode Ⅳ), chapter and section numbering, Super Bowl names, building dates, outline formatting, and formal event numbering.

Yes! Unicode Roman numerals work on Instagram, Twitter, Facebook, TikTok, Discord, and all platforms that support Unicode text. They are genuine characters, not images or special formatting.

Uppercase (Ⅰ Ⅱ Ⅲ) is the standard form used for chapter titles, clock faces, and formal numbering. Lowercase (ⅰ ⅱ ⅲ) is used in academic publishing for front matter pages, footnotes, and sub-level outline items.

Standard Roman numerals go up to 3999 (MMMCMXCIX). Unicode provides dedicated characters up to Ⅻ (12) plus Ⅼ (50), Ⅽ (100), Ⅾ (500), and Ⅿ (1000). For higher values, you combine these characters.

Absolutely. Roman numerals add a classic and distinctive look to usernames and display names. They work in most platforms that accept Unicode characters and are a popular choice for gamertags and social profiles.

The year 2026 in Roman numerals is MMXXVI. You can construct this using the Unicode characters: Ⅿ Ⅿ Ⅹ Ⅹ Ⅴ Ⅰ, or type the regular letters M, M, X, X, V, I.

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