"Un Peso" is Spanish for "One Peso."
It means "one peso." The peso is a unit of currency.
Many different Spanish speaking countries use or have used coins and paper money denominated as the "peso," which is the Spanish word for "pound." A coin or bill marked as "un peso" is a one peso coin or bill. The value of one peso depends on which country's currency is being assessed.
"Peso" or "de peso".
The word peso doesn't have a respelling.
Some currencies used in Spanish-speaking countries include the Mexican Peso (MXN), the Colombian Peso (COP), the Argentine Peso (ARS), the Chilean Peso (CLP), and the Euro in Spain.
You could say "Ella es de medio peso."
I would say "weigh here" (sign in a supermarket?) but it's not French, I think it's in spanish Peso is the currency in several Latin American countries... "pesito" is diminutive of peso... and "aquí" means "here" ... So it means that whatever they were offering was one peso or "one small peso here". Many times it is just to lure customers that way.
Yes. Its name is Mexican peso (Spanish: peso Mexicano)
uruguayan peso. (in spanish: peso uruguayo)Uruguayan Peso. As of December 31st, 2009 rates is about 0.05 US Dollars.
Money in Spanish is dinero. Dollar in Spanish is peso.
The term "peso" originates from the Spanish language. It was first used in Spain and then spread to various Spanish-speaking countries, where it is now commonly used as the name of their respective currencies.