The Italian lira is no longer legal tender. It has been replaced by the Euro.
The Italian Lira is no longer the standard legal tender of Italy, it was replaced by the Euro.
The Italian lira is no longer legal tender. It has been replaced by the Euro.
There is no Italian dollar. The previous currency for Italy was the lira, but it was eliminated in favor of the more-stable Euro in 2002. Lira coins and bills are no longer legal tender, but can be converted into Euros until February 29, 2012.(see related link)
No. Lira is no longer legal tender in Italy. There was a grace period when the Euro was introduced, but that is long past.
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.
If you are talking Italian lira you would have to ask a coin specialist. The lira hasn't been used in Italy for a while, not since the Euro became legal tender. If it is reasonably recent you would not be able to use it to buy anything with it but if it is especially old or important for another reason you may be able to get something for it from a collector.
Italian lira was created in 1861.
The Italian lira was launched in 1807.
The Italian Lira was superseded by the Euro in 1999.
Italian Somaliland lira was created in 1925.
'Lira' was the past currency before Euro. 'Lire' is the plural form of it: 1 Lira, 2 Lire. Lira in Italian is also a musical instrument.