The Lira and the Euro are two different currencies.
The Euro is used by 23 countries in Europe.
Lire is the plural of Lira. The following countries have the Lira as their currency:
- Turkey
- Lebanon. The Lebanese pound is called "lira" in local national language, Arabic.
- Syria. The Syrian pound is called "lira" in national language of Syria, Arabic.
- Jordan. A widely used name of Jordanian dinar is lira.
The Lira was also the currency of Italy until 2002. Since then, Italy has used the Euro.
about 51 euro cents~
The Euro is Italian money. The Italian Lire was withdrawn in 1992.
Others fgfgsfgsggsf
1 euro € is 0.790249 GBP 1 GBP is 1.26542 euro €
I guess we will have a problem on that. Lira is an obsolite currency. Italy now use euro instead.
'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.
euro
Italy was one of the first countries to adopt the Euro. Prior to their conversion to the decimal system based Euro (EUR) in 2002, Italy's currency was called the Lire. The Lire was equal to one hundred Centesimi, and it was the official Italian currency between 1861 and 2002.
about 51 euro cents~
When Euro comes in Italy, the conversion rate was of 1936,27 lire for 1 euro. Then 53 Lire (quite impossible to have it, because 50 lire was the smallest coin available) are 0,027 cent. of euro.
Lire is nolonger in use, Italy use euro now.
Lira (plural Lire) was the currency used in Italy before the Euro was introduced in 2002.
One Euro, lol.
8 - 4 = 4 euro
It used to be the Lire, but now it's the Euro.
The Euro is Italian money. The Italian Lire was withdrawn in 1992.
Not any more... the Lira was discontinued when Italy adopted the Euro.