Just the way you spell them today. They haven't changed. The only change was from the Greek to the Roman.
It is: ROMA We have the exact same alphabet as the ancient Romans.
ancient
They called him Neptune.
Brother of Hades- god of the underworld and Pasidan- god of the oceans (can't spell their names)
Delta, iota, omikron, nu, upsilon, sigma, omikron, sigma, with an acute accent on the first omikron.
There is no difference in the lettering of ancient and modern Hebrew writing׃מה שהולך מסביב, בא מסביבOr, traditionally:גלגל הוא שחוזר בעולם
It is: ROMA We have the exact same alphabet as the ancient Romans.
Δίας- ZeusΕρμής- HermesΆδης- HadesΔήμητρα- DemeterΑθηνά- AthenaΉφαιστος- HephaestusΑφροδίτη- AphroditeΑπόλλων- ApolloΆρης- AresΆρτεμις- ArtemisΔιόνυσος- DionysusΉρα- HeraΕστία- HestiaΠοσειδώνας- PoseidonΑχελώος- AchelousΑίολος- AeolusThis isn't all of them but heres a good list
The spelling "Livvy" is normally a nickname for the female given names Olivia and Olive. The ancient Roman historian is "Liv" or "Livy" for Titus Livius (59 BC - 17 AD)
nothing,they cant spell!
(in English lettering) Kastanias (Kahs.ta.KNEE.us)
The Latin word maximus was sometimes used in Roman names and titles.
The ancient regime is the Byzantine Empire (originally the Eastern Roman Empire).
Unfortunately your question isn't possible. You have asked to spell the word open using numbers. The word "OPEN" in the Roman alphabet is basically "OPEN" by English lettering with some variations to the actual letters. Here is an image with the alphabet letters. http://atschool.eduweb.co.uk/nettsch/time/alph.gif
?? I wanna know how to spell Japan and open up in Japanese x <3
Rome is not traditionally spelled out using Roman numerals. Roman numerals are used to represent numbers in ancient Rome, not for spelling out words.
The correct spelling is Colosseum for the Roman arena, officially the "Flavian amphitheatre."The US spelling of similar arenas is coliseum.