In the Netherlands we say cent; we also had the cent under the old guilder.
Or we write 0,25 euro or  25 ct or E 0,25.

I think that the Germans also say cent.

Han

----- Original Message -----
From: "kilopascal" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "U.S. Metric Association" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Sunday, 2002-09-01 15:14
Subject: [USMA:21998] RE: Spanish dollar


> 2002-09-01
>
> Could be, but we never write "c$", we use �.  What is also funny is in the
US, a "quarter can be written as either $ 0.25 (sometimes $ .25) or 25 �.
In one case the symbol precedes, and in the other, it follows.

> Does anyone in Euroland use or say centieuros or just cents?  Maybe the
Germans still call the centieuro a pfennig, no?  What about writing it out?
Is it always 0.25 ? or maybe 25 c??  How is it done?
>
> john
>
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Markus Kuhn" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: "U.S. Metric Association" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Sent: Sunday, 2002-09-01 09:00
> Subject: [USMA:21996] RE: Spanish dollar
>
>
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote on 2002-09-01 03:04 UTC:
> > > Depending on the subtleties of definition, the US currency is not
truly
> > > decimal. It has two base units, cent and dollar, just like many
> > > currencies.
> >
> > Didn't "cent" merely evolve as a short form for the word centidollar
> > and now also centieuro? So one base unit only ...
> >
> > Markus
> >
> > --
> > Markus G. Kuhn, Computer Laboratory, University of Cambridge, UK
> > Email: mkuhn at acm.org,  WWW: <http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~mgk25/>
> >
>
>

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