€500. They are rarely seen in circulation. The highest value in ordinary use is €200 but even these aren't often seen.
The highest denomination is €2. Other denominations are €1, and 50, 20, 10, 5, 2, and 1 cent.
There are 0.133... (recurring) coins of 1-Euro denomination in a gram. The value/mass for other Euro coinage is different.
It has this colour: because there are no €1000 notes. The highest denomination is €500.
€500. They are rarely seen in circulation. The highest value in ordinary use is €200 but even these aren't often seen.
The five hundred euro note is the highest value euro note in current circulation. It is one of the highest valued currency note in circulation. In October 2011, there were approximately 594,833,600 €500 banknotes in circulation.
There are 100 cents in a Euro.
Yes, no, maybe. It depends on the date and denomination. Anything from the 1970s on that came from circulation would not be silver. Otherwise you need to know the date and denomination. Of course since 2002 Italy has used euro coins and none of them are silver.
Germany uses the euro. Coins are 1, 2, 5, 10, 20, and 50 cents, and 1 and 2 euros. In common speech the lower-denomination coins are often called pfennige (pennies) because the pfennig was the smallest denomination prior to adoption of the euro. It's the same as the American and Canadian practice of calling cents "pennies" even though neither country has used penny-denominated coins in dozens of decades.
What?! Accept euro coins?? Who accept euro coins in the first place?
Yes. 2 euro is the largest denomination of euro coin.
1 euro coin and two 1/2 euro coins.
The name beside a harp on euro coins is ÉIRE. That is the Irish name for Ireland, and the coins with it on it are Euro coins from Ireland. They are accepted in any of the countries that use the Euro. Other countries would have different symbols and words on their Euro coins.
France uses the Euro, and as such has the same coins as other Euro nations. The (commonly circulating) coins are 1 cent, 2 cent, 5 cent, 10 cent, 20 cent, 50 cent, 1 Euro and 2 Euro coins. And banknotes in the denomination of 5 Euros, 10 Euros, 20 Euros, 50 Euros, 100 Euros, 200 Euros and 500 Euros.