The rates change every day. Use this currency converter to calculate it.
Oh, dude, mil cruzados? That's like a blast from the past! So, back in the day, 1000 mil cruzados would be worth around 1 US dollar. But hey, don't go trying to buy a yacht with that kind of cash now!
cuatro mil cuatrocientos veintidós punto cincuenta (4422.50) punto - point you can also say cuatro mil cuatrocientos veintidóspunto cinco (4422.5) In Mexico we use the point to separate decimals. Fer Garcia spanish2start.com founder
The cruzado is no longer in use.
The mil cruzado, a currency that was used in Brazil during the late 1980s and early 1990s, is no longer in use. It was replaced by the cruzeiro in 1990 and subsequently by the real in 1994. Today, the Brazilian real is the official currency of Brazil.
A Cruzado is a monetary unit that was in use from 1988 to 1990 in Brazil. It was equal to 100 centavos.
If this is a phone number or account number, you would use individual digits: 888 7540 = ocho ocho ocho siete cinco cuatro cero
Cinco de Mayo celebrates the Mexican victory at Puebla in the French-Mexican War.
Anyone who uses the .mil network.
Anyone with access to the .mil network.
Numerically, that is correct - most Spanish speaking countries use periods in the punctuation of large numbers, in place of the commas English speaking countries favor. Spelled out, this is "ocho millón setecientos ochenta y nueve mil."
Exchange rates change every day so any answer posted here would be out of date within 24 hours. While it's not normal WikiAnswers policy to say "use the Internet", that's the best approach in this case. You can check a site such as www.xe.com, CNNMoney, etc. for the latest conversion factors. However. Cruzados is no longer a valid currency, and therefore has no face value. It is only worth anything amongst collectors, and it is not worth all that much to begin with (probably to to the facts it's not that old, so there's plenty of it for people to get their hands on).