Could you please give a specific illustration, including the type of currency and the location of the letters?
There are a number of codes that appear on banknotes to indicate plate numbers and other such production specifics, so that's possibly what you are seeing.
Au Pairs - band - was created in 1979.
Au Go Go Records was created in 1979.
In light of the moonau Clair (no "e" at the end!) de la lune means "in moonlight" in French.
(Sk-au-dee)
"Au thé vert" is pronounced as "oh tay vehr" in French. The "au" sounds like "oh," "thé" is pronounced like "tay," and "vert" sounds like "vehr," with a soft 'r' at the end. The emphasis is generally on the second part, "thé."
Australian dollar
Australian Dollar ($)
AU stands for "About Uncirculated" and is not a code it's a grade. If you mean a mintmark? If the coin has one it's on the reverse above the letters DO in DOLLAR.
sauce
Auditoria, aura, aurora and automata begin with the letters au and end with a.
Au is the symbol for gold, from the Latin aurum.
Austria and Australia
It depends on the currency you are transferring from. US$4.95 is £3.22, while AU$4.95 is £2.975. For other currencies, use google converter.
As of August 1st, 2011, 14.95 EUR would be approximately 19.43 AUD (Rounded up from 19.4275 AUD), according to Google's Currency Converter.
It's likely the Australian Dollar, which is abbreviated AUD.
j'ai joué au foot means 'I played football' in French (understand 'soccer' if you live in the US)
Yes, you can