Euro: Difference between revisions

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imported>Doug Williamson
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#A prefix meaning that currency is held in a different jurisdiction from its country of origin. For example eurodollar or euroyen or, more generally, eurocurrencies.
1.
#Established by the 1992 Treaty on European Union (TEU, better known as the Maastricht treaty) the euro is the official currency of the European Union. Note that the currency takes lower case except where a capital is grammatically or stylistically required, for example, at the start of a sentence. The ISO (three letter) currency code for the euro is EUR.
 
A prefix meaning that currency is held in a different jurisdiction from its country of origin. For example eurodollar or euroyen or, more generally, eurocurrencies.
 
 
2.
 
Established by the 1992 Treaty on European Union (TEU, better known as the Maastricht treaty) the euro is the official currency of the European Union. Note that the currency takes lower case except where a capital is grammatically or stylistically required, for example, at the start of a sentence. The ISO (three letter) currency code for the euro is EUR.





Revision as of 15:03, 13 May 2016

1.

A prefix meaning that currency is held in a different jurisdiction from its country of origin. For example eurodollar or euroyen or, more generally, eurocurrencies.


2.

Established by the 1992 Treaty on European Union (TEU, better known as the Maastricht treaty) the euro is the official currency of the European Union. Note that the currency takes lower case except where a capital is grammatically or stylistically required, for example, at the start of a sentence. The ISO (three letter) currency code for the euro is EUR.


See also