"Free sugars" is a literal English equivalent of the French phrase sucres libres. The pronunciation of the masculine plural noun and adjective -- which references free-ranging, simple sugars -- will be "syook leeb" in northerly French and "syoo-kuh lee-bruh" in southerly French.
50,000 Sucres is equivalent to exactly $2.00 US Dollars.
.02
250 usd
New zealand value
Jean-Claude Dupont has written: 'Temps des sucres(Le)'
vous me manquez - I miss you (you formal or plural) et je rêve de tes baisers sucrés - and I dream of your sweet kisses (this is certainly already a translation from English)
Ecuador abandoned the Sucre in 2000 as its national currency and officially adopted the US Dollar. At the time of close there were 25000 Sucres to the US Dollar, so 10000 would be worth have been worth 40 cents US. Of course 9 years later, no-one is obliged to accept these as legal tender. So your 10000 Sucre bill is for all intents pointless.
According to my gf in Ecuador, she said 9 years ago. So, that being 1999
As of my last knowledge update in October 2021, the Ecuadorian sucre is no longer in use, having been replaced by the US dollar in 2000. The 20 sucres bill is now considered a collector's item rather than legal tender, and its value can vary based on condition and demand. Generally, it may be worth a small amount to collectors, often less than a dollar. For an accurate current valuation, you might check recent auction sites or collector forums.
It sounds like you're talking about the Sucre, which used to be the currency in Ecuador. It's unlikely you'll find a bank in Ecuador still willing to trade Sucres for Dollars.
The Ecuadorian Sucre (ECS) is obsolete, so there is no current conversion rate, the Sucre was last used in September 2000 at that time 2000 Sucre would have been less than a US dollar (about 75 US cents)
il y a 35g de sucre dans 33cl de coca cola Un sucre pese environ 5g donc il y a 7 sucres environ dans une canette de coca cola normale