Until it was replaced in 2002 by the Euro (composed of 100 cents), the unit of currency in France was the Franc, composed of 100 Centimes.
It could be. There are more than 35 different Creoles that are based on French.
"Josué" (rare, even more than "Joshua")
a dream is Un rêve; more than one, des rêves.
For one girl, it's petite fille. For more than one, it's ''petites filles''.
Je t'aime plus qu'hier, moins que demain in French means "I love you more than yesterday, less than tomorrow" in English.
There are at least twenty countries who issued a twenty centime coin in 1921. It would depend on the country. In all probability, if it was Belgian, or French, or Haitian, it would not be worth more than a dollar.
chad
Not much. I would think that the greater the year the more it's worth. For example, a 100 Franc coin with a date of 1980 would be worth more than the years before that. On the other hand, because it is rare it has a higher value than its nominal price at the official conversion rate.
No. The French Franc is a defunct currency. It has no worth other than as a collectible item. In France, they use Euros.
There is more than one type of franc and many countries use francs. With the exception of the two countries which use the Swiss Franc, they are all in Africa.Here is a list of them all with the countries which use them:Currency; ISO code; Country or countries using currencyBurundian franc; BIF; BurundiCentral African CFA franc; XAF; Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Republic of the Congo, Equatorial Guinea, GabonCFP franc; XPF; French Polynesia, New Caledonia, Wallis and FutunaComorian franc; KMF; ComorosCongolese franc; CDF; Democratic Republic of the CongoDjiboutian franc; DJF; DjiboutiGuinean franc; GNF; GuineaRwandan franc; RWF; RwandaSwiss franc; CHF; Switzerland, LiechtensteinWest African CFA franc; XOF; Benin, Burkina Faso, Côte d'Ivoire, Guinea-Bissau, Mali, Niger, Senegal, Togo
There is more than one type of franc and many countries use francs. With the exception of the two countries which use the Swiss Franc, they are all in Africa.Here is a list of them all with the countries which use them:Currency; ISO code; Country or countries using currencyBurundian franc; BIF; BurundiCentral African CFA franc; XAF; Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Republic of the Congo, Equatorial Guinea, GabonCFP franc; XPF; French Polynesia, New Caledonia, Wallis and FutunaComorian franc; KMF; ComorosCongolese franc; CDF; Democratic Republic of the CongoDjiboutian franc; DJF; DjiboutiGuinean franc; GNF; GuineaRwandan franc; RWF; RwandaSwiss franc; CHF; Switzerland, LiechtensteinWest African CFA franc; XOF; Benin, Burkina Faso, Côte d'Ivoire, Guinea-Bissau, Mali, Niger, Senegal, Togo
There is more than one type of franc and many countries use francs. With the exception of the two countries which use the Swiss Franc, they are all in Africa.Here is a list of them all with the countries which use them:Currency; ISO code; Country or countries using currencyBurundian franc; BIF; BurundiCentral African CFA franc; XAF; Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Republic of the Congo, Equatorial Guinea, GabonCFP franc; XPF; French Polynesia, New Caledonia, Wallis and FutunaComorian franc; KMF; ComorosCongolese franc; CDF; Democratic Republic of the CongoDjiboutian franc; DJF; DjiboutiGuinean franc; GNF; GuineaRwandan franc; RWF; RwandaSwiss franc; CHF; Switzerland, LiechtensteinWest African CFA franc; XOF; Benin, Burkina Faso, Côte d'Ivoire, Guinea-Bissau, Mali, Niger, Senegal, Togo
What you have is a Swiss Franc, it contains no precious metal value but is worth a bit more than $1 in currency exchange.
It's an obsolete coin that was worth 1/10 of a franc. Assuming you have a modern French 10 centime coin, it was worth about 2 cents at the time France switched to euros back in 2002. If your coin is older than 1960 please post a new question that includes its date.
More than is 'plus que' in French.
Assuming it's a French franc and not Swiss or Belgian, the answer is not much. This was a common coin until 2002 when France adopted the euro as its currency. At that time one franc was worth less than 20 cents US.
it's the old currency (previous than Euros) 1 euro = 6.55957 franc