"Dollars" in Spanish is "dólares." It is pronounced, "DOE-lar-ace." Sites such as learn-spanish.co.il provide audio pronunciations of many common Spanish words.
Dólar americano.
compañía multimillonaria
You say; "¿puede prestarme un dólar?" Literally "Can you loan me a dollar?"
Otro dia, otro dolar
Hi I live in latinamerican 360 dollar in spanish say trecientosesenta dolares
Spanish dollar was created in 1497.
Spanish - dólar or peso, French - dollar, Portuguese - coroa, Chinese - 美元 Keep in mind that one country's dollar is likely a completely different unit of currency than another country's. The U.S. and Canada both use the "dollar," but the Canadian dollar is a different currency unit than the U.S. dollar. Panama uses the U.S. dollar as their unit of currency.
Yes, the United States adopted the Spanish dollar as its primary currency during the late 18th century. The Continental Congress authorized the use of the Spanish dollar due to its widespread acceptance and reliability, leading to the establishment of the U.S. dollar in 1792. The U.S. dollar was initially based on the Spanish dollar's value, and the term "dollar" itself is derived from the Spanish "real de a ocho," a coin widely circulated in the Americas.
Stauer has the 1783 spanish silver dollar coin for sale at $79.00.
Una tarjeta de regalo de ($50.00 = cincuenta dolares).
The Spanish Milled Dollar is worth 8 reales. It is also known as a piece of eight. In fact, diverse theories link the money sign [$] to the stripes and bars on the Spanish Milled Dollar.
dólar