The French Franc was phased out during the year 2001 (The Euro was phased in at the same time) and put out of commercial use on Jan 1, 2002 (but coins and notes could still be changed in banks).
France adopted the Euro during the year 2001. Before that the French currency was the French Franc.
The French currency before 2002 was the French franc. Since then it is the Euro.
In French, "I did not finish it" is "Je na'i pas fini".
The currency of all parts of France is the Euro. This includes French Guiana.
The currency in French Polynesia is Franc and its code is XPF
"finish" from English to French: fini to say " I am finished" in French it is: jai fini
Before the Euro was introduced in Europe, the French currency was measured in Francs.
France introduced the Euro in Jan 2001 and phased out the French Franc during the same year. On Jan. 1, 2002, the Euro was the only legal currency.
The French currency before 2001 was the French franc (FF). It was phased out in 2001.
The currency in France used to be the franc. The currency has since changed, and France now uses the euro.
The French franc does not exist any more as a currency. It has been phased out in the year 2001 and the French use the Euro as their only currency since the beginning of 2002. An euro was worth 6.55957 francs at the time of the switch.
the French currency before the Euro was the franc (officially the 'French Franc', symbol FF). The subdivision was the 'centime' and was of trifle value. The French Franc were phased out throughout the year 2001 and replaced by the Euro. The exchange rate was 6.55957 FF for one Euro.