Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Cape Verde, Chile, Colombia, Dominica, East Timor, Ecuador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Mozambique, Nicaragua and the Phillipines.
Several countries used centavo as currency, and in 1944 The Philippines is to left of date
Several countries have 5 centavo coins. You need to specify which country.
A centavo is the lowest-denomination coin in the currencies of several countries that use the peso as their basic money unit. There are 100 centavos in each peso, just like there are 100 cents in a dollar or 100 pence in a pound sterling.
The Japanese government does not issue a currency called "centavo." In Japan, the official currency is the yen (JPY), and its smallest denomination is the 1 yen coin. If you meant the value of a centavo from countries that use that denomination, such as the Philippines, it would vary based on exchange rates; however, it does not have a direct equivalent in the Japanese yen.
One centavo is worth one-hundredth of a currency unit in countries that use the centavo, similar to how a cent is one-hundredth of a US dollar. Therefore, 1 centavo is equivalent to 0.01 US dollars, which is also equal to 0.01 cents. The exact value in terms of purchasing power can vary based on current exchange rates and inflation.
92452.839
It is: 962.33
I have 5 centavos.
To type the Philippine centavo sign (₱) on a Windows computer, you can use the Alt code method by pressing and holding the Alt key while typing 8369 on the numeric keypad. Alternatively, you can copy and paste the centavo sign from other sources, such as websites or documents that already have it included.
Centavo is the Mexican 1 cent or 1 penny
Ecuadorian centavo coins was created in 2000.
25/75 or 1/3