No. In Iceland we use the currency of Icelandic kroners.
Some supermarkets accept EURO bills, but not coins. Your change will be Danish Crowns (or Kroners) though.Not many outlets, if any at all, will accept EURO's.
Kroner means "crowns" -it's a monarchy
Several countries use that denomination, or a variation of it: Denmark, Norway, Sweden (called kronor), Iceland (kronur), and the Czech Republic (koruny). The name is derived from each country's word for "crown".However, even if the name is spelled exactly the same way the various kroners aren't interchangeable, just like you can't for example spend Hong Kong dollars in the U.S. You have to know which specific country issued your currency.
5 danish krone = 0.9432 US dollar almost 1 dollar
cophenhagen,denmark
Yes in some of the larger stores and they will give you danish money back... you can also go to a bank and exchange the money :)
At the time of answering - according to the currency web-site Xe... 1,000,000 SEK = 152,081.67 USD
There is no such thing as the German kroner. The currency in German is the Euro (symbol '€'). Currently (2012), USD 1 = € 0.77
100 danish kroners = 18.15 dollars
1 Swedish krona = 0.129074 U.S. dollars, so it would equal $128.94 Or did you mean kroners?
Specify the countries whose currencies these are. Many countries use rupees and many use pence.