Countries in Scandinavia use or have used the Kroner,
My Norwegian grandfather pays his groceries with kroner.
Yes!
There are no antonyms or synonyms for the word kroner. A krone is the unit of currency used in Norway and Denmark, the plural is kroner.
You just used it in a sentence.
Kroner is a term used in slang to refer to money or currency in general. It originated from the Danish and Norwegian word for "crowns," which are the units of currency in those countries. In slang, kroner is often used to describe or discuss money in a casual or colloquial way.
Like Sweden and Denmark, the currency is 'Kroner' pron. kroo-nuh, which directly translated means 'crowns' - the ISO code is NOK. 1 krone is made up of 100 øre, pron ur-ruh, which directly translated means 'ears'! This could well be ears of corn or wheat though ...!
The krone is the currency of Denmark, including the autonomous provinces of Greenland and the Faroe Islands. The plural form is "kroner" and one krone is divided into 100
A ti kroner, or "ten kroner," is a denomination of currency in Denmark and Norway, where "kroner" refers to their respective currencies, the Danish krone and the Norwegian krone. It is commonly used in everyday transactions, and coins or banknotes in this denomination feature various national symbols and figures. The term "ti" simply means "ten" in both Danish and Norwegian.
Amber Kroner is 5' 1".
Gary Kroner was born in 1940.
Richard Kroner was born in 1884.