Tremila nelle lire italiane is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "three thousand (3,000) in Italian lira." The pronunciation of the prepositional phrase -- which translates literally as "three thousand in the Italian liras" -- will be "trey-MEE-la NEL-ley LEE-rey EE-ta-LYA-ney" in Italian.
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.
Italian lira was created in 1861.
The Italian lira was launched in 1807.
No, the Turkish Lira and the old Italian Lira are different currencies. The Turkish Lira is the current currency of Turkey, while the Italian Lira was the previous currency of Italy before it switched to the Euro in 2002.
The Italian Lira was superseded by the Euro in 1999.
Italian Somaliland lira was created in 1925.
'Lira' was the past currency before Euro. 'Lire' is the plural form of it: 1 Lira, 2 Lire. Lira in Italian is also a musical instrument.
Italian East African lira ended in 1941.
Italian East African lira was created in 1936.
Lira.
No.
Italians?