China
Guatemala
Brazil.
India, Nepal, and Pakistan use rupee coins.
Belgium. But any coin with the name "Belgie" (French for "Belgium") is now obsolete. Belgium switched to the euro in 2002, and euro coins don't carry country names.
Scandinavian countries such as Denmark and Norway are known use Krone coins. In fact, the Danish have minted the coins since the 17th century.
Venezuela uses the bolivar and the USA uses the dollar.
uses of l-square
The Czech Republic, Sweden, Norway, and Iceland. However the currencies aren't the same, they just have the same name.
There are many old Chinese coins that have a square hole in them. These coins could date back 2400 years ago.
No country in Asia uses the Euro.No country in Asia uses the Euro.No country in Asia uses the Euro.No country in Asia uses the Euro.No country in Asia uses the Euro.No country in Asia uses the Euro.No country in Asia uses the Euro.No country in Asia uses the Euro.No country in Asia uses the Euro.No country in Asia uses the Euro.No country in Asia uses the Euro.
Not usually. Banks and Bureau de Change only change notes, not coins. Your best option is to keep them until you next got a a country which uses Euros, or find a friend or colleague who is going to a Euro country and swap with them.