Roman numeral analysis is the AP Music Theory labeling system that identifies each chord by the scale degree of its root (the Roman numeral), its quality (uppercase vs. lowercase), and its bass note (Arabic numeral figures), showing how chords function within a key.
Roman numeral analysis is how you describe a chord's job inside a key instead of just naming its notes. A C major triad is just "a C chord" by itself, but in the key of C major it's I (tonic), in F major it's V (dominant), and in G major it's IV (subdominant). Same notes, totally different function. The Roman numeral tells you the scale degree of the chord's root, the case tells you quality (uppercase for major, lowercase for minor, lowercase with ° for diminished), and attached Arabic numeral figures like ⁶ or ⁶₄ tell you which chord member is in the bass (per LO 3.3.A and the inversion conventions in PIT-2.A.2).
This system only works because tonal music is hierarchical. PIT-2.H.1 defines tonal music as pitch content organized around a central tonic, with every other pitch relating to it in a pre-established way. Roman numeral analysis is that hierarchy written down. Once every chord wears a label showing its relationship to tonic, you can see harmonic progressions, predict cadences, and check voice leading at a glance. That's why it shows up in Units 1, 3, and 4 and basically never leaves the course after it's introduced.
Roman numerals are the connective tissue of the whole AP Music Theory CED. They first appear in Unit 3, where LO 3.3.A asks you to identify chords "using letters and Roman/Arabic numerals that indicate specific scale degree of the root, quality, and bass note," and LO 3.3.B asks you to translate a figured bass into the Roman numeral progression it implies. LO 3.5.A extends the same system to seventh chords and their four positions, including third inversion with the chordal seventh in the bass (PIT-2.D.1). Then Unit 4 puts the labels to work. LO 4.3.A has you identify harmonic function in performed and notated music, LO 4.3.B has you spot cadences (a perfect authentic cadence is literally defined as V-I, both in root position, scale degree 1 in the soprano), and LO 4.4.A uses Roman numerals as the framework for 18th-century voice-leading analysis, error detection, and writing. None of that is doable without fluent Roman numeral reading, and all of it rests on the Unit 1 skill of naming scale degrees relative to tonic (LO 1.4.B).
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Figured Bass and Arabic Numerals (Unit 3)
Figured bass and Roman numerals are two halves of one labeling system. The Arabic figures tell you what intervals to build above the bass note, and per PIT-2.B.1 those resulting pitches imply harmonies you can label with Roman numerals. On the exam you constantly translate one into the other, like reading a 6/4 figure on scale degree 1 in F major and writing IV⁶₄.
Scale Degrees and Tonic Function (Unit 1)
Roman numerals are just scale degree numbers applied to chord roots. If you can name the dominant as scale degree 5 (LO 1.4.B), then V is simply the chord built on it. Every Roman numeral label is a Unit 1 skill wearing a Unit 3 costume.
Harmonic Function and Cadences (Unit 4)
Cadence identification under LO 4.3.B depends entirely on Roman numeral patterns. A perfect authentic cadence requires V-I with both chords in root position, and a deceptive cadence swaps the expected I for vi. You can't name the cadence until you've named the chords.
Voice Leading with Seventh Chords (Unit 4)
The Roman numeral label tells you which note is the chordal seventh, and that note has strict rules. Per PIT-4.A.7 and 4.A.8, sevenths are approached by common tone or step and resolve down by step. Spotting a V⁴₂ in your analysis instantly tells you the bass note must resolve down.
Roman numeral analysis is tested everywhere on the AP Music Theory exam. Multiple-choice questions give you a notated chord in a key and ask for the correct label, like a chord in F major with A in the bass plus C and F, which is the tonic triad in first inversion, I⁶ (the bass note A is the chordal third, not the root). The free-response section leans on it even harder. FRQ 5 asks you to realize a figured bass and supply the Roman numeral analysis, FRQ 6 asks you to part-write directly from given Roman numerals, and the 2025 exam's SAQ Q5 used Roman numeral analysis in its prompt. The skill being tested isn't just labeling. You have to read labels into four-voice writing (correct spacing, doubling, and resolutions) and pull labels out of a score, including identifying the cadence type the progression creates.
Figured bass tells you what to build, while Roman numerals tell you what it means. Arabic figures like 6/4 indicate intervals above a given bass note without naming the chord's function, and a slash or plus sign on a figure means raise that pitch a half step (PIT-2.B.2). Roman numerals identify the chord's root by scale degree and its function in the key. In practice you combine them, so IV⁶₄ means the subdominant chord with its fifth in the bass. On the exam, figured bass realization and Roman numeral analysis are paired tasks, not the same task.
Roman numeral analysis labels each chord by the scale degree of its root, with uppercase numerals for major chords and lowercase for minor or diminished chords.
Arabic numeral figures attached to the Roman numeral show the inversion, so ⁶ means first inversion (third in the bass) and ⁶₄ means second inversion (fifth in the bass).
Seventh chords add a third inversion, written ⁴₂, where the chordal seventh itself sits in the bass (PIT-2.D.1).
The same chord gets different Roman numerals in different keys, because the numeral describes function relative to tonic, not the chord's letter name.
Cadence identification depends on Roman numerals, since a perfect authentic cadence is specifically V-I with both chords in root position and scale degree 1 in the soprano.
On the FRQs, you both write Roman numerals under a figured bass realization and compose four-voice harmony from given Roman numerals, so the system has to work in both directions.
It's the system for labeling chords by the scale degree of their root within a key, using uppercase numerals for major chords (I, IV, V), lowercase for minor (ii, iii, vi), and lowercase with ° for diminished (vii°). Arabic figures added to the numeral show which chord member is in the bass.
No. Figured bass uses Arabic numerals to show intervals above a given bass note so a performer or writer can realize the chords, while Roman numerals identify each chord's root and function within the key. The CED treats them as paired skills, and LO 3.3.B specifically asks you to derive Roman numerals from a figured bass.
Case shows chord quality. Uppercase means major (I, IV, V in a major key), lowercase means minor (ii, iii, vi), and lowercase with a ° symbol means diminished (vii°). This matters on the exam because writing IV when the chord is minor iv counts as a wrong answer.
The superscript figures show the inversion. I⁶ is the tonic triad in first inversion with the chordal third in the bass, and V⁴₂ is the dominant seventh chord in third inversion with the chordal seventh in the bass. That seventh must resolve down by step (PIT-4.A.8).
Yes, heavily. It appears across the multiple-choice section, in the figured bass realization FRQ where you supply Roman numerals, and in the part-writing FRQ where you compose four voices from given Roman numerals. The 2025 exam's SAQ Q5 also used it directly.