euro
IPA: jˈuroʊ
noun
- The currency unit of the European Monetary Union. Symbol: €
- A coin with a face value of one euro.
- Macropus robustus, a wallaroo (macropod species).
- (soccer, usually followed by the year) The UEFA European Football Championship, a European football competition held between the international teams of Europe every four years.
- A ghost town in Western Australia.
- Abbreviation of European in any sense.
- (proscribed) Alternative spelling of euro, the currency and coin introduced 1999. [The currency unit of the European Monetary Union. Symbol: €]
- Clipping of European. [Person living or originating from Europe.]
adjective
- Clipping of European. [Related to Europe or the European Union.]
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Examples of "euro" in Sentences
- We abbreviate this to 'Euro Group'.
- The euro eases trade in the Eurozone.
- The amounts were denominated in euros.
- The prize comes with an honorarium of 10,000 euros.
- The agreement was intended to tie the dobra to the euro.
- The turnover of the company in 2006 was 392 million euros.
- The Euro zone economy is likely to remain laggard in 2013.
- "It just can't be that the euro is as good as the dollar."
- The club competes in the German League and the Euro League.
- It is either wine from 4 Euros a carafe or 12 Euros a bottle.
- In 2013, the question won't be if the euro will or will not implode.
- The introduction of the euro is therefore a major opportunity for London.
- For most of his term the euro has been a strong currency, at times reaching $1.60.
- Mr. Goodhart points out that the term euro bond is used loosely and could describe many different operations.
- Bundchen said: "The story of the euro is a lie," she told the Brazilian newspaper O Globo in comments published Wednesday.
- I'm not saying the euro is a cure-all but certainly it is constructive for the equity markets in the euro zone in our opinion.
- A rather unintelligent fairy tale. 90% of euros in Germany ARE German euros, and the euro is the euro whether Juan Carlos I is on it or not.
- In a letter to the Dutch EU presidency, the Lithuanian government insisted: "The non-inflective form of the term euro is unacceptable to the Lithuanian language."
- We asked one bookseller why prices were so high and he cited import costs and volume … cost the about the same to ship 1000 books as 5000, and have to spread that cost over fewer purchasers … also a lot of books come from the UK and the euro is almost 2.5 tmes higher than the kiwi.
- ATHENS — The massive emergency fund assembled to defend the value of the euro is backed by a political gamble with an uncertain outcome: that European governments will rewrite a post-World War II social contract that has been generous to workers and retirees but has become increasingly unaffordable for an aging population.
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