German marks
Deutsche Marks.
It was the mark. I lived in Germany and still have a few marks.
The Deutsche Mark was the official currency of Germany from 1948 to 2001. Since 2002 Germany has used the Euro (€).
The official exchange of Deutsche marks has come to an end. However, you can still take your old German currency to the Bundesbank (Germany's Central Bank) and exchange it for euros. Most currency exchanges (banks, airport exchanges, etc.) will only buy currency that is still in general circulation. Specialized currency exchanges such as Euro Coin Exchange (http://www.webuyeuros.com/germany) will buy your old marks, and you can get paid in dollars without having to ship your cash to Europe.
In what? What currency are you trying to convert to? A mark was the currency of Germany until the introduction of the euro. "zwanzig millionen" is twenty million.
Germans refer to coins or currency as Marks. The currency in Germany is called a Deutsche Mark, and can be found in different amounts of currency.Ê
Mark is short for Deutschmark which was the unit of currency in Germany before adoption of the Euro. One thousand Marks would be a thousand Deutschmarks.
Nowhere, the Deutschmark is no longer a currency and cannot be used anywhere.The Deutschmarks was the currency of the Federal Republic of Germany until 2002, when it was replaced by the Euro.
The direct translation of money in German is Geld.They use the Euro.
No, the Mark ceased to be legal tender in 2002.
Germany's currency is the Euro (symbol '€').