Currency sign

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Template:Currency signs A currency sign is a graphic symbol often used as a shorthand for a currency's name. Internationally, ISO 4217 codes are used instead of currency signs, though currency signs may be in common use in their respective countries. Most currencies in the world have no specific symbol.

When writing currency amounts the location of the sign varies by currency. Many currencies, especially in the English-speaking world, place it before the amount (e.g., £50.00); some after the amount (e.g., 50.00 S₣); and before they were abolished, the sign for the Portuguese Escudo and the French Franc were placed in the decimal position (i.e., 50$00 or 12₣34). The standardized European default placement, used in absence of a national standard, is that (€) is placed before the amount. However, many Eurozone countries have sustained or generated alternative conventions.

The decimal separator can also take local countries' standards. For instance, the United Kingdom often uses a middle dot as the decimal point on price stickers (eg., '£5·52'), although not in print. A comma (eg. '5,00 €') is a common separator used in other countries. See decimal separator for information on international standards.


Image:Currency-Symbol Regions of the World circa 2006.png

Currency Symbols used

[edit] Examples

[edit] Formerly used currency signs

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da:Valutategn

de:Währungssymbol el:Σύμβολο νομίσματος fr:Symbole monétaire it:Simboli di valuta nl:Valutateken ja:通貨記号 ru:Знаки валют fi:Valuuttatunnus sv:Valutabeteckning

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