The name for the French coin is Euro.
no
You may be referring to the liard coin.
Penny (as in a coin): souPenny (as in the name): Same spelling as the English, Penny.
Just looking at the coin carefully will help. The name of the country might not be in English. For example, a French coin will say Republique Francaise on it, and a Swiss coin will say Confederatio Helvetica. A good coin book will help find the answer.
There is no French equivalent; the first name Isaac is used in French as well.
Heptagon
the Sou (alternate spelling 'sol') was an old French coin.
FRANC
You may be referring to the liard coin.
The Franc :D
The old French coin starting with the letter "E" is called the Écu. It was a silver coin used in France from the 13th to the 18th century.
In French, 'huguenot' was the name for protestants. There is no old French coin known as a 'huguenot' - but there is a 1924 US half-dollar called 'Hugenot-Walloon tercentenary'. (follow link)
'un sou' (alternative spelling 'sol') was a small French coin in the past. That still lives in the language in the expression 'avoir des sous' (to be rich).
Penny (as in a coin): souPenny (as in the name): Same spelling as the English, Penny.
Just looking at the coin carefully will help. The name of the country might not be in English. For example, a French coin will say Republique Francaise on it, and a Swiss coin will say Confederatio Helvetica. A good coin book will help find the answer.
The French currency in the 18th century was the franc. Some coins were named by old names like the Louis (the largest coin).
Dixieland - named after the ten-cent coin ('DIX') from when Louisiana was French.
coin 1945-1989 french "pro libertate"