Historically, Italy used the lira, but it currently uses the euro.
Turkey also uses the Turkish Lira and the Syrian Pound is called the Syrian Lira in Arabic.
Turkey uses "lira".Turkish Lira
No. Italy uses the euro while Turkey uses the Turkish Lira. Historically, Italy used the Italian Lira which was a distinct currency from both the euro and the Turkish Lira.
The Turkish Lira is used in Istanbul and in Turkey.
Turkey uses the Lira. It's a decimal system, with 100 Kurus per 1 Lira. The New Turkish Lira came into effect on January 01, 2005. Exchange rate example, on October 06, 2007: 1 Turkish Lira = 0.83724 U.S. Dollars
The currency used in Ankara is the same as the currency used all around Turkey. It is called the "Turkish Lira". Because the currency recently experienced a revaluation and it is now called the "New Turkish Lira".The currency in Turkey is the Turkish lira.
i want to buy turkish lira
On 1 January 2005 the New Turkish Lira entered the Turkish market and become legal tender. 1 million old lira is now worth 1 Turkish Lira.
Revaluation of the Turkish Lira was created in 2005.
The Turkish lira is still in use. There are 1,000,000 old lira in 1 New Turkish lira. 1 New Turkish lira is worth (March 2009) about US$0.75. Any remaining old lira has to be converted at either the Turkish Central Bank or T.C. Ziraat Bank branches, at the rate of 1 million old lira = 1 new lira
1 Turkish lira = 0.667111 U.S. dollars
You can only get old Turkish lira changed into new Turkish lira in Turkey. There are 1,000,000 old lira in 1 New Turkish lira, so your old lira have little money value, just curiosity value. (1 New Turkish lira is worth (March 2009) about US$0.75.) Any remaining old lira has to be converted at either the Turkish Central Bank or T.C. Ziraat Bank branches, at the rate of 1 million old lira = 1 new lira
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