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Euro
(redirected from euros)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.01 sec.
Euro
Originally, the term for a deposit made outside one's home country but denominated in the home country currency. This terminology is confusing now since the new European Currency unit, also called the Euro, was introduced on January 1, 1999.

euro
A common currency used by many European countries. The euro was established in 1999 when 11 European countries adopted a common currency in order to facilitate global trade and encourage the integration of markets across national borders. Euro banknotes and coins began circulating in January 2002.

Euro
The currency of participating member nations of the European Union. The euro was introduced in 1999 and became the official currency of participating nations in 2002. It was intended to remove the exchange rate risk of businesses participating in the EU's common market and free trade association. It has become one of the world's most important currencies. Proponents of the euro state that it is more valuable than the former currencies, while opponents say that it has made goods and services in their home countries more expensive. See also: European Central Bank, EURIBOR, Eurozone.

Euro. The euro is the common currency of the European Monetary Union (EMU). The national currencies of the participating countries were replaced with euro coins and bills on January 1, 2002.



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document management specialist Danka, key public sector organizations in the United Kingdom are wasting 722 million euros a year because they are failing to control the production of printed documents.
suppliers to bill in euros and thus assume the cost and risk of foreign currency transactions.
1, 2002 -- when these nations start conducting all business transactions in euros -- legacy currencies such as the French franc and German mark will disappear completely.
 
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