The Mark (or Deutsche Mark) was the German monetary unit prior to the Euro. It was the equivalent of the Dollar in America and the Pound in England.
However, English speakers still refer to it as the Mark. It is not called the German Dollar or the German Pound.
Student
Yes, the name Marks IS a German name.
German marks are no longer legal tender, as of 2002. Germany uses the Euro now. German marks have only a numismatic value.
1,991 German marks
I believe the rough English equivalant of this question is, "Are you ready to grow up now?"
We have 14 punctuational marks in English
Roderich Cescotti has written: 'Luftfahrt-Definitionen' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, Aeronautics, German, English, German language, English language 'Aviation dictionary' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, Aeronautics, German, English, German language, English language 'Luftfahrt-definitionen, Englisch-Deutsch/Deutsch-Englisch = Glossary of aeronautical definitions, English-German/German-English' 'Aerospace Dictionary, German to English and English to German' 'Glossary of aeronautical definitions; English-German, German-English' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, Aeronautics, German, English, German language, English language
German marks
Euros. They used to have the German Marks. But they have since changed currency.
Deutsch is and English translation for German. And it is using English and German
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English is "Englisch". And German is "Deutsch".