The gram.
You'd need a keyboard with umlauts, or you have to use unicode characters.
"Vartija" (guard), "Turvallisuusvalvoja" or "Järjestyksenvalvoja", which literally means safety supervisor."Turvatarkastaja" for a guard at an airport/harbor checkpoint, for example.You could use the Finnish word for guard alone.
The correct translation would be (Sinä) olet kaunis, pronunciation in IPA: /sinæ olet̪ kɑunis/.
The currency of Sweden is Krona (meaning crown). They are not part of the EMU (European Monetary Union) and thus are still not using the Euro. They are a member of the European Union, but only 17 of the 27 countries in the European Union use the euro. The others use their own currency.
A group of donkeys or jackasses is called a herd or pace. Most people use the term herd instead of pace.
Yes, people in Sudan do use money. The currency of Sudan is the Sudanese Pound.
kilos
They do use the Baltic Sea
Not after 2002.
Same thing they use today, the Pound Sterling. Also called the Pound, Quid, or Sterling.
5000 pound stone
The Great British Pound I think
crowd
people
Finnish is the national language, but some people in Finland can speak English. It is one of the languages that children study in school.
Pound coins
Yes. The Euro is the legal currency in the Republic of Ireland, so Irish people do use it. In Northern Ireland people use the pound Sterling.