13 cents. But of course it does not exist as Italy has used Euro since (at least for Interbank transactions) 1999.
Zero. Lira are not produced anymore. Italy uses the Euro.
The Italian lira is no longer in circulation, having been replaced by the euro in 2002. At the time of conversion, 200 Italian lira would have been worth a very small amount in US dollars, likely less than $0.10 due to the lira's low value.
No. You must use Turkish Lira in Turkey. US Dollars are not accepted in most placed.
According to my calculations it is about 1Lira = .44 dollars. I had to do the math from pounds to dollars and then pounds to Lira and then dollars to lira. I hope I got it right.
200 Turkish Lira
On 11/12/10, 1 Italian lira = .000705632 US dollars. See the link below for the most recent conversion.
89 Turkish lira is exactly 47.595077261 Australian dollars. I hope I helped. :)
There are about 40 Canadian dollars in 200 norwegian krona. So about 40 dollars American.
1 Turkish lira = 0.667111 U.S. dollars
$10,000 us
200 American dollars
Today, nothing. Italy stopped using lira in 2002 when they adopted the euro. At that time 200 lira was equivalent to about ten cents.