Not sure what 36 (£) would be, but my husband took £50 into Thomas Cook travel yesterday and got 120 lira in exchange. Hope this may be of some help.
Yes, bin is thousand. 100 Bin lira = 100 Lira.
50,00 lira=33,462.70 USD
It depends on whether your 500,000 Lira are Old Lira or New Lira. If they are Old Lira (aside from the fact that this currency is defunct) it would be worth around $0.28 USD. If these are New Lira, it would be worth about $277,800.00 USD.
If you have a single 250,000 lira bank note, that is the old lira. It was replaced with the new lira in 2005 at a rate of 1,000,000 old lira to 1 new lira.If it is the old lira you have, it is 0.25 new lira (TRY) and worth around 0.17 USD, assuming you can still find a place to exchange it for the new lira.See related link.
There are 1,000,000 old lira in 1 New Turkish lira, so your old lira have little money value, just curiosity value. (1 New Turkish lira is worth (March 2009) about US$0.75.) Any remaining old lira has to be converted at either the Turkish Central Bank or T.C. Ziraat Bank branches, at the rate of 1 million old lira = 1 new lira
Before Italy adopted the Euro the currency was the Lira. good
Yes, bin is thousand. 100 Bin lira = 100 Lira.
Johnny Lira's birth name is John Lira.
AM-lira was created in 1943.
Hugo Lira's birth name is Hugo Ernesto Lira.
Soia Lira's birth name is Maria Auxiliadora Lira.
50,00 lira=33,462.70 USD
The Turkish Lira is used in Istanbul and in Turkey.
36003 = 3600 x 3600 x 3600 = 46656000000
3600 3600 +1800 _____ 9000
36 percent of 3600 = 1296 36% of 3600 = 36% * 3600 = 36%/100% * 3600 = 0.36 * 3600 = 1296
It depends on: A) What sort of Lira. There are many countries whose currency is called Lira in English; Turkish Lira, Lebanese Lira etc. B) What sort of dollars, Australian, Singapore etc. If you mean Italian Lira, the answer is nothing. Italian Lira were replaced by Euros in 2002, and they can no longer be exchanged.