I don’t know
The Italian lira was replaced by the euro in 2002 and is no longer convertible to US dollars. At that time 100000 lira was equivalent to about US$57.
1 Turkish lira = 0.667111 U.S. dollars
About 75 US cents. 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.
About US$1.50 There are 1,000,000 old lira in 1 New Turkish lira, so your old lira have little money value, just curiosity value. 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.
The Italian Lira is obsolete and was replace by the Euro on January 1,2002. Before, 1000 lire would be equivalent to less than a dollar.
Italy does not have "Italian dollars". Italy switched over from the Lira to the Euro.
Although the Italian lira is no longer in circulation having given way to the EU's euro, when used, one million of them was generally worth between $750 and $1,400 dollars depending on the markets.
In 1955, the exchange rate between the Italian lira and the US dollar was approximately 620 Italian lira to 1 US dollar. This means that one Italian lira was worth about 0.0016 US dollars in 1955. Keep in mind that exchange rates can fluctuate due to various economic factors.
The Italian lira was replaced by the euro in 2002 and is no longer convertible to US dollars. At that time 100000 lira was equivalent to about US$57.
It depends on: A) What sort of Lira. There are many countries whose currency is called Lira in English; Turkish Lira, Lebanese Lira etc. B) What sort of dollars, Australian, Singapore etc. If you mean Italian Lira, the answer is nothing. Italian Lira were replaced by Euros in 2002, and they can no longer be exchanged.
The lira has not been in use since 2002. Italy is now entirely on the Euro system.
Turkish or (the retired) Italian lira? In 2000, near the end of the use of lira in Italy, there were roughly 1900 Italian lira to the dollar. So, about 4.5 US cents. Today, one Turkish lira = .67 US cents, so 86 lira equals US$ 57.62.
The Italian lira is no longer in circulation, having been replaced by the euro in 2002. At the time of conversion, 200 Italian lira would have been worth a very small amount in US dollars, likely less than $0.10 due to the lira's low value.
On 11/12/10, 1 Italian lira = .000705632 US dollars. See the link below for the most recent conversion.
As of 2021, the Italian lira is no longer in use, as Italy now uses the euro as its currency. However, if we were to convert, 9,000 Italian lira would have been equivalent to a very small amount in US dollars due to the lira's extremely low value before it was replaced by the euro.
(8/2010) 1 AUD = 1,338.51 LBP (Lebanese pounds)
As of January 8,2009, the old 20 million Turkish lira is 12.86 USD There are 1,000,000 old lira in 1 New Turkish lira, so your old lira have little money value, just curiosity value. 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.