If you mean translating the Italian words for the demomination on old Lira notes into English (All Lira notes became obsolete in 2002 and Italy uses the Euro now):
Cinque = 5
Dieci = 10
Cinquanta = 50
Cento = 100
Cinquecento = 500
Mille = 1000
Duemila = 2000
Cinquemila = 5000
Diecimila = 10000
Ventimila = 20000
Cinquantamila = 50000
Centomila = 100000
2006-12-31 10:31:24
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answer #1
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answered by F. Frederick Skitty 7
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Italian Currency
2016-10-02 07:16:54
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answer #2
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answered by laseter 4
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Italian currency USED to be in lira...and the exchange rate was approximately 1,600 lira = 1 US dollar.
NOW they use Euros in Italy. So the value of 10,00 is 10 Euro.
2006-12-30 21:19:13
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answer #3
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answered by jammer 1
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Italy now uses the Euro instead of the lira. Some countries use a comma instead of a decimal-point. 10,00 would be 10.00 Euros or 10 Euros 0 cents (euro-cents). You would just say '10 Euros'.
For an amount such as 10,75, you would just say '10 Euros 75'.
2006-12-30 20:58:20
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answer #4
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answered by ricochet 5
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Italian currency is the Euro. and 10,00 is ten Euro's equivilant to about 13.00 us dollars. They use a comma where we use a period to divide dollars and cents.
2006-12-30 21:04:03
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Europeans use commas and periods opposite to the way Americans do. So while we would write 1,234.56, they would write 1.234,56. Their way makes more logical sense to me actually.
2006-12-30 21:05:31
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answer #6
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answered by Neebler 5
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euro.
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2006-12-30 20:57:02
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answer #7
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answered by muso m 2
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