Ah, the phrase "dollar two ninety eight" simply means two dollars and ninety-eight cents. It's a way of expressing a price in a casual manner. Just imagine all the happy little things you could buy with that amount!
Our dollar is weaker than their moneythe dollar is weak
It stands to reason ...or is this a trick question? Yes, the US dollar is worth more than the Jamaican dollar.
I think it means United States Dollar
What does etvir mean on a deed on real estate
Do you mean the circulating dollar coin minted from 1971 to 1978, or the commemorative coin issued in 1990? The circulating coins are worth only a dollar each. The commemoratives are worth about $15.
it means almost full, or almost complete, or most of the time.
One dollar.
It means 'Seven million, eight hundred ninety thousand, four hundred sixty-five'.
The phrase shrinking dollars has a very sad meaning. It means that the value of a dollar is becoming less.
it means that skaters rule and everyone elce stinks but the skaters familys owns ! Actually, ninety-nine times out of a hundred means that there is a 99 percent probability that an event will occur.
Well, isn't that just a happy little number we have here! To write 8.97 in word form, you simply say "eight point nine seven." Just like painting a beautiful landscape, writing numbers in word form can be a soothing and creative experience.
It is an Irish phrase meaning "my pulse", which is a term of endearment. It comes a longer Irish phrase meaning, "the pulse of my heart".
Nine tenths of the earth would mean ninety percent of the earth. Used in a phrase one could say: Nine tenths of the earth has some form of life on it. [though I doubt that fact is true.]
An expression or phrase that is understood, but doesn't litterally mean verbatim what it says, for example: "A penny for your thoughts" or "A day late and a dollar short."
The phrase is "sixty-four thousand dollar question," and it came from a Fifties TV show in which it was the most valuable and presumably the most difficult question.
"Noventa" is the Spanish word for "ninety".
Cowboys loved a colorful phrase! This meant a penny. The implication was that money was worth less back East in Boston.