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.]
Advertisement

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.

Related Links

synonyms for eurodescribing words for euro
Advertisement
#AaBbCcDdEeFfGgHhIiJjKkLlMmNnOoPpQqRrSsTtUuVvWwXxYyZz

© 2024 Copyright: WordPapa