means money denominated in the lawful currency of a country.
The legal tender for a particular country which is issued by that country's government.
circulating money, used numismatically to denote a non-proof coin
Any form of money that is in public circulation.
Context is: trade term. The circulating media of exchange in a country. Prior to World War I, currency generally meant coins and paper money. But with the expanding use of credit instruments, it has come to include checks drawn on bank accounts, postal money orders, and prepaid travelers checks that usually require identification of maker or endorser. Most business transactions are carried out by means of bank checks. See also Convertibility; Devaluation; Mercantilism; Money; Par Value; Reserve Currency.
The exchange rate among different components of characters - their Effectiveness values, their Resources, and their Metagame properties. In many games, Currency is explicit in terms of character points, but it is present in any and all role-playing games.
IndiaMART uses only the U.S. Currency for listing deals on its auction site. If your Bid for a product was say $250, it would be presumed that it meant 250 U.S. Dollars.
Any medium of exchange that all parties involved agree is equitable.
in Britain in the 1930s One Pound (L) = 20 shillings (s.) One shilling = 12 pence (d.) So 8d. = 8 twelfths of a shilling and 5d. = 5 twelfths. One Penny = 2 halfpennies, or four farthings. L.s.d. meant something quite different in those days! Though the Pound and the Penny have been retained since decimalization, the new UK Pound = 10 new Pence.
bu - small coin, worth 1/4 of a ryo. mon - a copper coin. kan - A bund of 1,000 mon. monme - A silver piece. ryo - A gold piece, worth 60 monme or four kan. shu - Edo-period coin. Worth 1/16th of a ryo.
Derived from the Latin term currentia - a stream. Used to describe any medium of exchange which 'flows' from one hand to another such as coins, notes, tokens, shells, etc.
the metal or paper medium of exchange that is presently used
a means of exchanging value between people in a way that is much more flexible than barter
an instrument, one denominated , like all instruments, in some combination of other instruments
a of exchange, facilitating the
a proxy for the country it represents, therefore the economic health of that country is priced into
a unit of exchange, facilitating british conversion dollar pound us british conversion dollar pound us
A Foreign Currency or U.S. Dollars.
The monetary unit used in particular countries (i.e. Rupee in India, US dollar in the USA, yen in Japan, sterling in India).
Field data type that contains dollar and cent amounts. 3.16, 13.5
the money used in a particular country.
A country?s unit of exchange issued by their government or central bank whose value is the basis for trade.
The currency of a given country refers to what can be legally used as money within that country. The governing body of a country decides upon the values and denomination of their currency. For example, the denominations we use here in Australia are dollars and cents, and the values of these are: $100, $50, $20, $10, $5, $2, $1, 50 cents, 20 cents, 10 cents and 5 cents. Other countries, such as the USA, also use dollars and cents, but their money cannot be used within Australia without currency exchange.
A country's unit of exchange that has a value in terms of purchasing goods and services within the country.
A form of money in actual use as a medium of exchange.
the type of money a country uses
Paper money issued by the government.
National form for payment medium: dollars, pesos, rubles, naira, pounds, etc.
Refers to legal tender; usually used for paper money only, but does apply to both coins and notes.
The cash notes and coins (example, U.S. dollars and Timor centavos) which can be exchanged for goods or services.
Paper money is also called currency.
Money -- anything used as a common medium of exchange. In practice, currency means cash, particularly paper money. Bankers often use the phrase "coin and currency" to refer to cents and dollars.
This shows the currency that a security trades in, such as USD for U.S. dollar.
Money issued by a government. Coins and paper money. It is a form of money used as a unit of exchange within a country.
money in its physical form: coins and paper money.
Is the lawful money or medium of exchange in a country.
Paper bills and coins held by the public.
Units of exchange that must be used to purchase goods and services in a particular country, e.g. Australian dollars in Australia.
The denomination of money that your auction will be in. The currency does not have to be the same as your country's currency.For example, you may choose the US Dollar eventhough you live in Canada, or elsewhere.
any kind of money used as a medium of exchange
Default is USD for U.S. dollars. This feature will be used when non-U.S. dollars are used in a transaction
Default is GBP for U.K. pounds. This feature will be used when sterling is used in a transaction.
Any form of money in use as a medium of exchange or value.
The paper bills and coins in the hands of the public.
The donomination of the notes and coins in circulation in an economy. The UK currency is the pound sterling; the US currency is the dollar; the new European currency is the euro.
An item that people use as a medium of exchange. Currency can be money, shells, feathers, or many other things.
The currency column on the hotlist view shows the currency that a stock is quoted in. This is displayed in the ISO 4217 format plus GBX and USX for Great British pence and US cents. Common codes include GBP - Great British Pounds, GBX - Great British Pence, USD - US Dollars, USX - US Cents, EUR - Euros.
money used in a given place. The Peso, Yen, and Dollar are currency in different countries.
Type of money a country uses that can be traded for other currencies on the foreign exchange market.
Currency is money that is issued by a national government.
Notes and coins issued by the central bank or government serving as legal tender for trade.
Any form of money issued by a government or central bank and used as legal tender and a basis for trade.
Virtually every country issues its own currency. That is the notes and coins they use. As a visitor or resident, you will need to buy and use it too. Sometimes, as in China, there is a separate currency only tourists can, and must, use. A currency whose value does not change violently relative to other currencies is said to be stable. The opposite is a volatile currency. One whose currency is stable and generally improving long-term is hard. One in decline is soft.
A Foreign Currency or US Dollar.
Coins, tokens, paper notes and other articles intended to pass current in general circulation as money.
Currency is Money. It is issued by a country's central bank. It is the lifeblood of any economic system.
Something we use to buy and sell (exchange) goods and services. Money is a type of currency.
Money (used by a country or group of countries). Depending on the international confidence which a currency enjoys, one talks in terms of a hard, strong or stable currency on the one hand, or of a soft or weak currency on the other hand.
Paper money. Explore the federal government's American Currency Exhibit online and take a virtual tour of the Money Museum.
Another name for paper money. Old currency that is recycled can be made into tree-free paper.
Form of money issued as notes and coins by one country's central bank or government, serving as legal tender for trade.
The money of a country that circulates as a medium of exchange (e.g., coins, dollar bills, euros).
The medium of exchange in a given country consisting generally of bills (paper) and coins that is issued by the government and designated as legal tender for the payment of all obligations.
The unit of exchange accepted within an economy